Economic growth and economic development 709

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Economic growth and economic development 709

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Introduction to Modern Economic Growth papers use the term directed technical change, but here we used the related term directed technological change, to emphasize continuity with the models of endogenous technological change studied in the previous chapters The framework presented here builds on Acemoglu (2002a) A somewhat more general framework, with much less functional form restrictions, is presented in Acemoglu (2007) Other papers modeling the direction of technological change include Caselli and Coleman (2004), Xu (2001), Gancia (2003), Thoenig and Verdier (2003), Ragot (2003), Duranton (2004), Benabou (2005), and Jones (2005) Models of directed technological change are closely related to the earlier literature on induced innovation The induced innovation literature was started indirectly by Hicks, who in The Theory of Wages (1932), argued “A change in the relative prices of the factors of production is itself a spur to invention, and to invention of a particular kind–directed to economizing the use of a factor which has become relatively expensive.” (pp 124-5) Hicks’ reasoning, that technical change would attempt to economize on the more expensive factor, was criticized by Salter (1960) who pointed out that there was no particular reason for saving on the more expensive factor–firms would welcome all cost reductions Moreover, the concept of “more expensive factor” did not make much sense, since all factors were supposed to be paid their marginal product An important paper by Kennedy (1964) introduced the concept of “innovation possibilities frontier” and argued that it is the form of this frontier–rather than the shape of a given neoclassical production function–that determines the factor distribution of income Kennedy, furthermore, argued that induced innovations would push the economy to an equilibrium with a constant relative factor share (see also Samuelson, 1965, and Drandakis and Phelps, 1965) Around the same time, Habakkuk (1962) published his important treatise, American and British Technology in the Nineteenth Century: the Search for Labor Saving Inventions, where he argued that labor scarcity and the search for labor saving inventions were central determinants of technological progress The flavor of Habakkuk’s argument was one of induced innovations: labor scarcity increased wages, which in turn encouraged labor-saving 695

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