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One Cold Link: “The Past and Future of Economic Growth: A Semi-Endogenous Perspective”

The Past and Future of Economic Growth: A Semi-Endogenous Perspective is a growth economics paper by Charles I. Jones, asking big questions about what has powered economic growth1 over the last 50+ years, and what the long-run prospects for continued economic growth look like. I think the ideas in it will be unfamiliar to most people, but they make a good amount of intuitive sense; and if true, they seem very important for thinking about the long-run future of the economy. Key quotes, selected partly for comprehensibility to laypeople and ordered so that you should be able to pick up the gist of the paper by reading them: “Where do ideas come from? The history of innovation is very clear on this point: new ideas are discovered through the hard work and serendipity of people. Just as more autoworkers will produce more cars, more researchers and innovators will produce more new ideas … The surprise is that we are now done; that is all we need for the semi-endogenous model of economic growth. People produce ideas and ... those ideas raise everyone’s income ... the growth rate of income per person depends on the growth rate of researchers, which is in turn ultimately equal to the growth rate of the population.” A key idea not explicitly stated in that quote, but emphasized elsewhere in the paper, is that ideas get harder to find: so if you want to maintain the same rate of innovation, you need more and more researchers over time. This is a simple model that can potentially help explain some otherwise odd-seeming phenomena, such as the fact that science seems to be “slowing down.” Basically, it’s possible that how much innovation we get is just a function of how many people are working on innovating - and we need more people over time to keep up the same rate. So in the short run, you can get more innovation via things like more researcher jobs and better education, but in the long run, the only route is more population. “Even in this … framework in which population growth is the only potential source of growth in the long run, other factors explain more than 80% of U.S. growth in recent decades: the contribution of population growth is 0.3% out of the 2% growth we observe. In other words, the level effects associated with rising educational attainment, declining misallocation, and rising research intensity have been overwhelmingly important for the past 50+ years.” “The point to emphasize here is that this framework strongly implies that, unless something dramatic changes, future growth rates will be substantially lower. In particular, all the sources other than population growth are inherently transitory, and once these sources have run their course, all that will remain is the 0.3 percentage point contribution from population growth. In other words … the implication is that long-run growth in living standards will be 0.3% per year rather than 2% per year — an enormous slowdown!” “if population growth is negative, these idea-driven models predict that living standards stagnate for a population that vanishes! This is a stunningly negative result, especially when compared to the standard result we have been examining throughout the paper. In the usual case with positive population growth, living standards rise exponentially forever for a population that itself rises exponentially. Whether we live in an “expanding cosmos” or an “empty planet” depends, remarkably, on whether the total fertility rate is above or below a number like 2 or 2.1.” “Peters and Walsh (2021) ... find that declining population growth generates lower entry, reduced creative destruction, increased concentration, rising markups, and lower productivity growth, all facts that we see in the firm-level data.” So far, the implication is:


Footnotes

  1. You can try this short explanation if you don’t know what economic growth is. ↩ For email filter: florpschmop Powered by Ghost

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