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Economic growth / David N. Weil.

By: Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Boston, MA : Pearson Addison-Wesley, c2013.Edition: 3rd edDescription: xx, 556 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780321795731
  • 9781138568440
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.9 23 WEI
Contents:
Cover Page Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Brief Contents Contents Preface About the Author Chapter 1 The Facts to Be Explained 1.1 Differences in the Level of Income among Countries Box: Total GDP Versus GDP per Capita 1.2 Differences in the Rate of Income Growth among Countries Growth's Effect on the Level of Income Box: Working With Growth Rates Growth during Recent Decades Box: Growth Versus Business Cycles Growth since 1820 Growth before 1820 Box: Income Inequality between and within Countries Economic Growth as Seen from Outer Space 1.3 Conclusion Appendix Measuring and Comparing GDP Using Purchasing Power Parity Chapter 2 A Framework for Analysis 2.1 The Economics of Sylvania and Freedonia: A Parable 2.2 From Parable to Practice The Production function From Income Levels to Growth Rates 2.3 What Can We Learn From Data? Scatter Plots and Correlations Box: Randomized Controlled Trials Box: Learning From Historical Data 2.4 Conclusion Chapter 3 Physical Capital 3.1 The Nature of Capital 3.2 Capital's Role In Production Using a Production function to Analyze Capital's Role Box: Capital's Share of National Income Factor Payments and Factor Shares 3.3 The Solow Model Determination of Capital per Worker Box: The Rise and Fall of Capital Box: Measuring Change Over Time Steady states Box: Steady State: A Noneconomic Example The Solow Model as a Theory of Income Differences The Solow Model as a Theory of Relative Growth Rates 3.4 The Relationship Between Investment and Saving Explaining the Saving Rate: Exogenous Versus Endogenous Factors The Effect of Income on Saving Box: Government Policy and the Saving Rate 3.5 Conclusion Box: The Rise and Fall of Capital Revisited Appendix Further Exploration of the Cobb-Douglas Production Function and the Speed of Convergence in the Solow Model Chapter 4 Population and Economic Growth 4.1 Population and Output Over the Long Run Population over the long run The Malthusian Model Box: The Power of Population The Breakdown of the Malthusian Model 4.2 Population Growth in the Solow Model Population Growth and Capital Dilution A Quantitative Analysis 4.3 Explaining Population Growth Mortality Transition Fertility Transition The Interaction of Fertility and Mortality 4.4 Explaining the Fertility Transition Reduced Fertility: The Means Box: Family-Planning Programs and Their Effects Reduced Fertility: The Motives 4.5 Conclusion Appendix More Formal Description of the Total Fertility Rate, Life Expectancy, and Net Rate of Reproduction Chapter 5 Future Population Trends 5.1 Forecasting Population Forecasting Mortality Forecasting Fertility Box: Aids in Africa Box: The Tempo Effect Demographic Momentum Population in the Very Long Run Box: How many People Can the Earth Support? 5.2 The Economic Consequences of Demographic Change The Slowdown in Population Growth Population Aging Redrawing the World Map Going for the Gold 5.3 Conclusion Chapter 6 Human Capital 6.1 Human Capital in tHe Form oF HealtH The Effect of Health Differences on Income Modeling the Interaction of Health and Income Box: Health and Income Per Capita: Two Views 6.2 Human Capital in the form of Education Changes in the Level of Education Box: The Economic Effects of Malaria Education and Wages Human Capital's Share of Wages Box: The College Premium in the United States 6.3 How Much of the Variation in Income across Countries Does Education Explain? A Quantitative Analysis of the Impact of Schooling Differences among Countries 6.4 Conclusion Box: Human Perfectability and the Growth Slowdown Chapter 7 Measuring Productivity 7.1 Productivity in the Production Function 7.2 Differences in the Level of Productivity among Countries Measuring Productivity Differences among Countries The Contribution of Productivity to Income Differences among Countries Box: Problems with Measuring Capital—and Their Implications for Measuring Productivity Box: Mathematical Extension Box: The Relative Importance of Productivity and Factor Accumulation 7.3 Differences in the Growth Rate of Productivity among Countries Measuring Countries' Productivity Growth The Contribution of Productivity to Growth Differences among Countries 7.4 Conclusion Box: A Tale of Two Cities Chapter 8 The Role of Technology in Growth 8.1 The Nature of Technological Progress Technology Creation Transfer of Technology Determinants of R&D Spending 8.2 Patents and Other Forms of Intellectual Property Protection Problems with the Patent System Alternatives to Patents 8.3 Modeling the Relationship Between Technology Creation and Growth One-Country Model Two-Country Model Box: International Technology Transfer 8.4 Barriers to International Technology Transfer Appropriate Technology Tacit Knowledge Box: Embodied Technological Progress and Leapfrogging 8.5 Conclusion Mathematical Appendix Incorporating Technological Progress into the Solow Model Chapter 9 The Cutting Edge of Technology 9.1 The Pace of Technological Change Technological Progress before the 18th Century Box: Some Milestones of Technological Progress The Industrial Revolution Technological Progress since the Industrial Revolution 9.2 The Technology Production function Box: General-Purpose Technologies The Relationship between Technology Level and the Speed of Technological Progress Box: Science and Technology Decreasing Returns to Scale in Technology Production Implications for the Future of Technological Progress Box: Where is the Cutting Edge of Technology? 9.3 Differential Technological Progress Differential Technological Progress: Two Theoretical Examples Technological Progress in the Real World: Goods versus Services Technological Progress in the Real World: Information Technology Box: Predicting Technological Progress Too Optimistic Too Pessimistic 9.4 Conclusion Mathematical Appendix An Improved Version of the Technology Production Function Chapter 10 Efficiency 10.1 Decomposing Productivity Into Technology and Efficiency Analyzing Cross-Country Data 10.2 Differences in Efficiency: Case Studies Central Planning in the Soviet Union Textiles in 1910 Differences in Productivity Within an Industry Subsurface Coal Mining in the United States, 1949–1994 10.3 Types of Inefficiency Unproductive Activities Idle Resources Misallocation of Factors among Sectors Misallocation of Factors among Firms Technology Blocking Box: Finance and Growth 10.4 Conclusion Chapter 11 Growth in the Open 11.1 Autarky Versus Openness Measuring Output in an Open Economy Globalization: the Facts Globalization: The Causes Box: Tariffs, Quotas, and other Trade Restrictions 11.2 The Effect of Openness on Economic Growth Growth in Open versus closed economies How Changes in Openness Affect Growth The Effect of Geographical Barriers to Trade 11.3 Openness and Factor Accumulation Growth with capital mobility Assessing the Free-Capital-Flow Model 11.4 Openness and Productivity Trade as a Form of Technology Box: The Rise and Fall of Consolidated Alchemy Openness and technological progress Openness and efficiency 11.5 Opposition to Openness Anti-Globalization Exploitation of Workers Inability of Poor Countries to Compete Environmental Exploitation Loss of National Sovereignty The Hidden Price of Foreign Capital Hypocrisy on the Part of Rich Countries 11.6 Conclusion Chapter 12 Government 12.1 Defining Government's Proper Role in the Economy The Case for Government Intervention in the Economy The Case Against Government Intervention in the Economy Swings of the Pendulum 12.2 How Government Affects Growth Rule of Law Taxation, Efficiency, and the Size of Government Planning and Other Industrial Policies The Other Path Planning is not Always a Failure Civil Conflict 12.3 Why Governments do Things that are Bad for Growth Some other Goal Corruption and Kleptocracy Self-Preservation Government Regulation: Helping Hand or Grabbing Hand? 12.4 Why Poor Countries have Bad Governments Causation Running from Income to Government Quality Box: Democracy and Economic Growth Causation Running from Government Quality to Income 12.5 Conclusion Questions For Review Chapter 13 Income Inequality 13.1 Income InequalIty: the Facts Using the Gini Coefficient to Measure Income Inequality The Kuznets Hypothesis Is Growth Good for the Poor? 13.2 Sources of Income Inequality Explaining the Recent Rise in Income Inequality 13.3 Effect of Income Inequality on Economic Growth Effect on the Accumulation of Physical Capital Effect on the Accumulation of Human Capital Income Inequality, Income Redistribution, and Efficiency Sociopolitical Unrest in Response to Income Inequality Empirical Evidence 13.4 Beyond Income Distribution: Economic Mobility 13.5 Conclusion Chapter 14 Culture 14.1 The Effect Of Culture On Economic Growth Openness to New Ideas Hard Work Saving for the Future Trust Box: What Parking Tickets Say about Culture Box: Pitfalls of Cultural Explanations for Economic Growth Social Capital Box: Importance of Social Capital at the Village Level Social Capability Box: Changes in Appropriate Culture 14.2 what DetermineS Culture? Climate and natural resources Cultural homogeneity and Social Capital Population Density and Social Capability 14.3 Cultural Change Box: Determinants of Cooperation: an Experimental Approach Economic Growth and Cultural Change Government Policy and Cultural Change Media and Cultural Change 14.4 Conclusion Chapter 15 Geography, Climate, and Natural Resources 15.1 Geography Location, Trade, and Growth Guns, Germs, and Geography Geographic Concentration and Spillovers Geography's Effect on Government 15.2 Climate Climate and Agricultural Productivity Climate and Disease Climate and Human Effort 15.3 Natural Resources The Relationship Between Natural Resources and Growth Explanations for the Resource Curse 15.4 Conclusion Box: Resources and Early Industrial Development: The Case of Coal Chapter 16 Resources and the Environment at the Global Level 16.1 Natural Resource Concepts Nonrenewable Resources Renewable Resources Property Rights over Resources Resources and production 16.2 Incorporating Natural Resources into the Analysis of Economic Growth Box: Resource Disasters Revising National Accounts Resource Prices Box: The Bet Why Resource limitations do not prevent economic Growth Box: Resource-Saving Technologies Nitrogen Rubber Nuclear Fusion Solar Energy 16.3 Growth and the Environment The Environmental Kuznets Curve Box: The Environmental Kuznets Curve in London Global Warming 16.4 Conclusion Appendix Appendix Technological Improvement versus Resource Depletion Chapter 17 What We Have Learned and Where We are Headed 17.1 What We have Learned Factor accumulation Productivity Fundamentals 17.2 What the Future Holds Will Growth Make us happy? What Will happen to the World income distribution? Will technological Progress Continue apace? What is the Future of World demographics? Will Global economic integration Continue? Will shortages of natural resources Constrain economic Growth? 17.3 A Final Thought References Glossary Index Credits
Summary: Economic Growth (International Edition) Why are some countries rich and others poor? David N. Weil, one of the top researchers in economic growth, introduces students to the latest theoretical tools, data, and insights underlying this pivotal question. By showing how empirical data relate to new and old theoretical ideas, Economic Growth provides students with a complete introduction to the discipline and the latest research. With its comprehensive and flexible organization, Economic Growth is ideal for a wide array of courses, including undergraduate and graduate courses in economic growth, economic development, macro theory, applied econometrics, and development studies.
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Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
General Books CUTN Central Library Social Sciences Non-fiction 338.9 WEI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 52013

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Brief Contents
Contents
Preface
About the Author
Chapter 1 The Facts to Be Explained
1.1 Differences in the Level of Income among Countries
Box: Total GDP Versus GDP per Capita
1.2 Differences in the Rate of Income Growth among Countries
Growth's Effect on the Level of Income
Box: Working With Growth Rates
Growth during Recent Decades
Box: Growth Versus Business Cycles
Growth since 1820
Growth before 1820
Box: Income Inequality between and within Countries
Economic Growth as Seen from Outer Space
1.3 Conclusion
Appendix Measuring and Comparing GDP Using Purchasing Power Parity
Chapter 2 A Framework for Analysis
2.1 The Economics of Sylvania and Freedonia: A Parable
2.2 From Parable to Practice
The Production function
From Income Levels to Growth Rates
2.3 What Can We Learn From Data?
Scatter Plots and Correlations
Box: Randomized Controlled Trials
Box: Learning From Historical Data
2.4 Conclusion
Chapter 3 Physical Capital
3.1 The Nature of Capital
3.2 Capital's Role In Production
Using a Production function to Analyze Capital's Role
Box: Capital's Share of National Income
Factor Payments and Factor Shares
3.3 The Solow Model
Determination of Capital per Worker
Box: The Rise and Fall of Capital
Box: Measuring Change Over Time
Steady states
Box: Steady State: A Noneconomic Example
The Solow Model as a Theory of Income Differences
The Solow Model as a Theory of Relative Growth Rates
3.4 The Relationship Between Investment and Saving
Explaining the Saving Rate: Exogenous Versus Endogenous Factors
The Effect of Income on Saving
Box: Government Policy and the Saving Rate
3.5 Conclusion
Box: The Rise and Fall of Capital Revisited
Appendix Further Exploration of the Cobb-Douglas Production Function and the Speed of Convergence in the Solow Model
Chapter 4 Population and Economic Growth
4.1 Population and Output Over the Long Run
Population over the long run
The Malthusian Model
Box: The Power of Population
The Breakdown of the Malthusian Model
4.2 Population Growth in the Solow Model
Population Growth and Capital Dilution
A Quantitative Analysis
4.3 Explaining Population Growth
Mortality Transition
Fertility Transition
The Interaction of Fertility and Mortality
4.4 Explaining the Fertility Transition
Reduced Fertility: The Means
Box: Family-Planning Programs and Their Effects
Reduced Fertility: The Motives
4.5 Conclusion
Appendix More Formal Description of the Total Fertility Rate, Life Expectancy, and Net Rate of Reproduction
Chapter 5 Future Population Trends
5.1 Forecasting Population
Forecasting Mortality
Forecasting Fertility
Box: Aids in Africa
Box: The Tempo Effect
Demographic Momentum
Population in the Very Long Run
Box: How many People Can the Earth Support?
5.2 The Economic Consequences of Demographic Change
The Slowdown in Population Growth
Population Aging
Redrawing the World Map
Going for the Gold
5.3 Conclusion
Chapter 6 Human Capital
6.1 Human Capital in tHe Form oF HealtH
The Effect of Health Differences on Income
Modeling the Interaction of Health and Income
Box: Health and Income Per Capita: Two Views
6.2 Human Capital in the form of Education
Changes in the Level of Education
Box: The Economic Effects of Malaria
Education and Wages
Human Capital's Share of Wages
Box: The College Premium in the United States
6.3 How Much of the Variation in Income across Countries Does Education Explain?
A Quantitative Analysis of the Impact of Schooling Differences among Countries
6.4 Conclusion
Box: Human Perfectability and the Growth Slowdown
Chapter 7 Measuring Productivity
7.1 Productivity in the Production Function
7.2 Differences in the Level of Productivity among Countries
Measuring Productivity Differences among Countries
The Contribution of Productivity to Income Differences among Countries
Box: Problems with Measuring Capital—and Their Implications for Measuring Productivity
Box: Mathematical Extension
Box: The Relative Importance of Productivity and Factor Accumulation
7.3 Differences in the Growth Rate of Productivity among Countries
Measuring Countries' Productivity Growth
The Contribution of Productivity to Growth Differences among Countries
7.4 Conclusion
Box: A Tale of Two Cities
Chapter 8 The Role of Technology in Growth
8.1 The Nature of Technological Progress
Technology Creation
Transfer of Technology
Determinants of R&D Spending
8.2 Patents and Other Forms of Intellectual Property Protection
Problems with the Patent System
Alternatives to Patents
8.3 Modeling the Relationship Between Technology Creation and Growth
One-Country Model
Two-Country Model
Box: International Technology Transfer
8.4 Barriers to International Technology Transfer
Appropriate Technology
Tacit Knowledge
Box: Embodied Technological Progress and Leapfrogging
8.5 Conclusion
Mathematical Appendix
Incorporating Technological Progress into the Solow Model
Chapter 9 The Cutting Edge of Technology
9.1 The Pace of Technological Change
Technological Progress before the 18th Century
Box: Some Milestones of Technological Progress
The Industrial Revolution
Technological Progress since the Industrial Revolution
9.2 The Technology Production function
Box: General-Purpose Technologies
The Relationship between Technology Level and the Speed of Technological Progress
Box: Science and Technology
Decreasing Returns to Scale in Technology Production
Implications for the Future of Technological Progress
Box: Where is the Cutting Edge of Technology?
9.3 Differential Technological Progress
Differential Technological Progress: Two Theoretical Examples
Technological Progress in the Real World: Goods versus Services
Technological Progress in the Real World: Information Technology
Box: Predicting Technological Progress
Too Optimistic
Too Pessimistic
9.4 Conclusion
Mathematical Appendix
An Improved Version of the Technology Production Function
Chapter 10 Efficiency
10.1 Decomposing Productivity Into Technology and Efficiency
Analyzing Cross-Country Data
10.2 Differences in Efficiency: Case Studies
Central Planning in the Soviet Union
Textiles in 1910
Differences in Productivity Within an Industry
Subsurface Coal Mining in the United States, 1949–1994
10.3 Types of Inefficiency
Unproductive Activities
Idle Resources
Misallocation of Factors among Sectors
Misallocation of Factors among Firms
Technology Blocking
Box: Finance and Growth
10.4 Conclusion
Chapter 11 Growth in the Open
11.1 Autarky Versus Openness
Measuring Output in an Open Economy
Globalization: the Facts
Globalization: The Causes
Box: Tariffs, Quotas, and other Trade Restrictions
11.2 The Effect of Openness on Economic Growth
Growth in Open versus closed economies
How Changes in Openness Affect Growth
The Effect of Geographical Barriers to Trade
11.3 Openness and Factor Accumulation
Growth with capital mobility
Assessing the Free-Capital-Flow Model
11.4 Openness and Productivity
Trade as a Form of Technology
Box: The Rise and Fall of Consolidated Alchemy
Openness and technological progress
Openness and efficiency
11.5 Opposition to Openness
Anti-Globalization
Exploitation of Workers
Inability of Poor Countries to Compete
Environmental Exploitation
Loss of National Sovereignty
The Hidden Price of Foreign Capital
Hypocrisy on the Part of Rich Countries
11.6 Conclusion
Chapter 12 Government
12.1 Defining Government's Proper Role in the Economy
The Case for Government Intervention in the Economy
The Case Against Government Intervention in the Economy
Swings of the Pendulum
12.2 How Government Affects Growth
Rule of Law
Taxation, Efficiency, and the Size of Government
Planning and Other Industrial Policies
The Other Path
Planning is not Always a Failure
Civil Conflict
12.3 Why Governments do Things that are Bad for Growth
Some other Goal
Corruption and Kleptocracy
Self-Preservation
Government Regulation: Helping Hand or Grabbing Hand?
12.4 Why Poor Countries have Bad Governments
Causation Running from Income to Government Quality
Box: Democracy and Economic Growth
Causation Running from Government Quality to Income
12.5 Conclusion
Questions For Review
Chapter 13 Income Inequality
13.1 Income InequalIty: the Facts
Using the Gini Coefficient to Measure Income Inequality
The Kuznets Hypothesis
Is Growth Good for the Poor?
13.2 Sources of Income Inequality
Explaining the Recent Rise in Income Inequality
13.3 Effect of Income Inequality on Economic Growth
Effect on the Accumulation of Physical Capital
Effect on the Accumulation of Human Capital
Income Inequality, Income Redistribution, and Efficiency
Sociopolitical Unrest in Response to Income Inequality
Empirical Evidence
13.4 Beyond Income Distribution: Economic Mobility
13.5 Conclusion
Chapter 14 Culture
14.1 The Effect Of Culture On Economic Growth
Openness to New Ideas
Hard Work
Saving for the Future
Trust
Box: What Parking Tickets Say about Culture
Box: Pitfalls of Cultural Explanations for Economic Growth
Social Capital
Box: Importance of Social Capital at the Village Level
Social Capability
Box: Changes in Appropriate Culture
14.2 what DetermineS Culture?
Climate and natural resources
Cultural homogeneity and Social Capital
Population Density and Social Capability
14.3 Cultural Change
Box: Determinants of Cooperation: an Experimental Approach
Economic Growth and Cultural Change
Government Policy and Cultural Change
Media and Cultural Change
14.4 Conclusion
Chapter 15 Geography, Climate, and Natural Resources
15.1 Geography
Location, Trade, and Growth
Guns, Germs, and Geography
Geographic Concentration and Spillovers
Geography's Effect on Government
15.2 Climate
Climate and Agricultural Productivity
Climate and Disease
Climate and Human Effort
15.3 Natural Resources
The Relationship Between Natural Resources and Growth
Explanations for the Resource Curse
15.4 Conclusion
Box: Resources and Early Industrial Development: The Case of Coal
Chapter 16 Resources and the Environment at the Global Level
16.1 Natural Resource Concepts
Nonrenewable Resources
Renewable Resources
Property Rights over Resources
Resources and production
16.2 Incorporating Natural Resources into the Analysis of Economic Growth
Box: Resource Disasters
Revising National Accounts
Resource Prices
Box: The Bet
Why Resource limitations do not prevent economic Growth
Box: Resource-Saving Technologies
Nitrogen
Rubber
Nuclear Fusion
Solar Energy
16.3 Growth and the Environment
The Environmental Kuznets Curve
Box: The Environmental Kuznets Curve in London
Global Warming
16.4 Conclusion
Appendix
Appendix Technological Improvement versus Resource Depletion
Chapter 17 What We Have Learned and Where We are Headed
17.1 What We have Learned
Factor accumulation
Productivity
Fundamentals
17.2 What the Future Holds
Will Growth Make us happy?
What Will happen to the World income distribution?
Will technological Progress Continue apace?
What is the Future of World demographics?
Will Global economic integration Continue?
Will shortages of natural resources Constrain economic Growth?
17.3 A Final Thought
References
Glossary
Index
Credits

Economic Growth
(International Edition)
Why are some countries rich and others poor? David N. Weil, one of the top researchers in economic growth, introduces students to the latest theoretical tools, data, and insights underlying this pivotal question. By showing how empirical data relate to new and old theoretical ideas, Economic Growth provides students with a complete introduction to the discipline and the latest research. With its comprehensive and flexible organization, Economic Growth is ideal for a wide array of courses, including undergraduate and graduate courses in economic growth, economic development, macro theory, applied econometrics, and development studies.

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