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Note that I here denotes gross investment, the sum of K (net investment) and depreciation K .
Equations - are a system of 4 equations in the 4 unknowns K, Y, L, C. We can drop equation
and the variable C and have 3 equations in 3 unknowns.
Reducing the Model to a Univariate Differential Equation
Unlike an ordinary system of equations, this one involves a time derivative – K – as well as the
levels of the variables. This means we can’t actually solve the system for the values of the
variables in terms of the constant parameters , n, , s, A . But we can solve to obtain K as a
function of constants and of K .
Before solving for an equation in K and K alone, we make a change of variables. It turns out to
be convenient to work with k K L and y Y L , per capita variables, rather than the
aggregate variables Y, K, and L. This allows us to rewrite as
y Af ( k ,1) ,
using the linear homogeneity of f. Dividing by K and subtracting n L L (implied by ) from
both sides of the equation produces
k y
s n .
k k
Substituting for y using , we get
k Af ( k ,1)
s n .
k k
Equation is a differential equation in the single equation k. Given any initial value k ( t0 ) for k at
some initial date t t 0 , we can find k ( t0 ) as
F FsAf ck bg
t ,1h II .
G
H G
k (t 0 ) k (t 0 ) 1
H k bg t 0
n
0
JKJK
Equation is obtained by using the approximation, valid for small e, that
k (t 0 ) k (t 0 ) k (t 0 ) , together with . If we want to find k ( t1 ) for some t1 considerably
b g
larger than t0 , we can break the interval t 0 , t1 into many subintervals small enough to make an
accurate approximation on each small subinterval, then apply one step at a time to build up a
calculation of k ( t1 ) . If, for example, we break up the long interval into N equal subintervals,
b g
each of length N t1 t 0 N , we can check whether the intervals are small enough to make
the approximation accurate by repeating the calculation for a larger N, verifying that k (t1 )
comes out almost the same.
Sometimes a differential equation like this has an analytic solution. That is, we may be able to
see an explicit representation of k (t ) as a formula involving an initial value k (t 0 ) and the date t,
so that building up the solution numerically from an equation like is unnecessary. For example,
suppose f is Cobb-Douglas, f ( K , L) AK L1 . Then becomes
k
sAk 1 n .
k
This does not generally have an analytic solution, but if n 0 , it does. In that case we can
multiply both sides by k 1 to obtain
As .
kk
Then we can observe that
F IJ k 1
G
H K d
1
.
kk
dt
So the left-hand side of is the time-derivative of a function of k, while the right-hand side is the
time derivative of any function of the form st constant . So we conclude
k (t )1
Ast M ,
1
where M is some constant. This can be solved for k ( t ) to yield
cb gb gh
1
k (t ) 1 Ast M 1 .
The reason this solution involves an unknown constant M is that our original equation only
gives us rates of change from some initial starting point. Every initial value of k (t 0 ) produces a
different time path for k, corresponding to a different M. To find the M consistent with a given
k (t 0 ) , we set t t 0 in .
Note that, so long as labor contributes to production and therefore 1 , shows that k will grow
no matter how big k is. It is not too hard to verify that the percentage rate of growth per year
gets lower and lower as k grows, according to , but it never goes to zero. This is not typical of
the way this model behaves, as we will see below. For n 0 , which is more realistic than
n 0 , growth of output is negative when k gets large enough.
FAs I
1
k G J
1
H n K .
This equation tells us that steady-state capital stock per capita (and therefore output per capita
also) is higher when the savings rate s or the level of total factor productivity A is higher, and
lower when the depreciation rate d or the population growth rate n is higher. These conclusions
make sense.
Though A, s, n, and d, all affect the steady-state level of per capita output, they do not in this
model have any effect on the growth rate in steady state. In this model’s steady state we have k
and y fixed. Since L is growing steadily at the rate n, the same must be true in steady state of K
and Y. Thus saving a bigger fraction of income than other countries, even if the higher saving is
maintained forever, cannot move a country toward a higher growth rate that is sustained forever.
Implications for Convergence
Looking at the right-hand side of , we can see that for the Cobb-Douglas case, the growth rate of
k is monotone decreasing in k. This means in turn that whenever k is above its steady-state value
k , k is decreasing, and whenever it is below k , it is increasing. This means that the steady state
value k is stable. Once we deviate from it, we tend to return to it. This conclusion holds under
weak assumptions on the form of f, not just for this Cobb-Douglas example. Thus this Solow
model implies a particular form of convergence. In the study of economic growth, convergence
refers broadly to a tendency for poor countries to grow faster than the average and rich countries
to grow slower than the average.
The Solow model predicts a particular, narrow form of convergence, however. Notice that it
does not imply that per capita output eventually equalizes across countries. Countries that differ
in their values of A, s, n, and d will have different steady state levels of per capita output. The
Solow model does not even, strictly speaking, predict that in a given year, when we look at data
for all countries in the world (say), we will find that poor countries tend to be growing faster
than rich ones. The Solow model implies that countries can be poor either because they have a
low value of k relative to k , or because they have a low value of k . Countries with a low k
will not tend to grow faster than countries with high k , though countries with low k relative to
their own k will tend to grow faster. The Solow model predicts that poor countries grow faster
than rich countries only if the differences among countries in their levels of k are not
systematically negatively related to their levels of k k . This may usually be true, but it isn’t
necessarily true. [To test your understanding, explain why poor countries would not tend to
grow faster than rich ones under the following assumptions. Suppose that before the current
year all countries were in steady state at their own k k values. All countries have the same
values of A, s and d, so that differences in per capita wealth arose entirely from differences in n,
the population growth rate. In the current year a large volcano has erupted, creating permanent
worldwide increases in acid rain and declines in sunlight. This has made A decline permanently
by 10% in all countries. This of course changes each country’s k and makes each country’s
actual current k differ from its k .]
Technological Change
The model as we have laid it out here implies that eventually all countries’ incomes grow at the
same rate as their populations. When Solow wrote, nearly all countries had had increasing per
capita incomes for a very long time. He was therefore not satisfied with a model that predicted
no long-term growth in y, and from the start worked with an assumption that A grew steadily,
i.e. that
At A0e t ,
where l is some fixed rate of technical progress. It is usually thought of as representing pure
advances in knowledge, and in this model such advances are treated as originating
“exogenously”, that is, outside the growth process being modeled. [There is a recent literature
on “endogenous growth” that attempts to model how technical progress might be induced by
economic mechanisms. Much of the Barro and Sala-I-Martin book is taken up with tracing out
the implications of such models and testing them against data.]
It turns out that for the model with Cobb-Douglas f we do not need to do anything new with the
mathematics to handle the case of an A that grows according to instead of staying fixed. We
can instead convert the technical progress into a quality correction to labor. Observe that we can
write
FL e It 1
t
Yt A0e f ( Kt , Lt ) A0e t
Kt L1t A0 Kt G
H JK
t
1 .