Economic growth and economic development 708

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Economic growth and economic development 708

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Introduction to Modern Economic Growth induces endogenous changes in technology that are relatively biased towards that factor Consequently, any increase in the ratio of skilled to unskilled workers or in the capital-labor ratio will have major implications about the relative productivity of these factors The more surprising result is the strong equilibrium bias one, which states that contrary to basic producer theory, (relative) demand curves can slope up In particular, if the elasticity of substitution between factors is sufficiently high, a greater relative supply of a factor causes sufficiently strong induced technological change to make the resulting relative price of the more abundant factor increase In other words, the long run (endogenous-technology) relative demand curve becomes upward-sloping The possibility that relative demand curves may be upward-sloping not only has a range of important empirical implications, but also illustrates the strength of endogenous technological change models, since such a result is not possible in the basic producer theory with exogenous technology The chapter has concluded with a number of applications of these ideas to a range of empirically important areas Models of directed technological change are very much in their infancy and there are many theoretical dimensions in which further developments are possible Perhaps more importantly, there are also numerous applications of these ideas Finally, this chapter has also been an important step in our investigation of the causes of cross-country income differences and sources of modern economic growth Its main lesson for us is in clarifying the determinants of the nature of technological progress Technology should not be thought of as a black box, but the outcome of decisions by firms, individuals and other agents in the economy This implies that profit incentives will play a major role in both the aggregate rate of technological progress and also in the biases of the technologies that are being developed and adopted Models of directed technological change illustrate this reasoning in a sharp way and show a range of its implications 15.9 References and Literature Models of directed technological change were developed in Acemoglu (1998, 2002a, 2003a,b, 2007), Kiley (1999), and Acemoglu and Zilibotti (2001) These 694

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