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typical person a country with nd a country with ssume that educa- 6. The amount of...
3. The amount of education a person receives varies substantially among countries. Suppose you were to compare a country with a less educated labor force (with labor efficiency E1) and a country with a highly educated labor force (with labor efficiency E 2). Assume that education affects the level but not the growth of the efficiency of labor, that is E1
Part A requires a drawn Solow graph
3. The amount of education a person receives varies substantially among countries. Suppose you were to compare a country with a less educated labor force (with labor efficiency E1 and a country with a highly educated labor force (with labor efficiency E2). Assume that education affects the level but not the growth of the efficiency of labor, that is E1 E2, but gi=82. Otherwise, assume that the countries are identical they have the...
There are two countries, Anihc (country A) and Bapan (country B), with the same production function fk=5k0.5. However, country A has saving rates of 0.2, depreciation rate of 0.2 and population growth of 0.2; while country B has saving rates of 0.1, depreciation rate of 0.15 and population growth of 0.05. Using the Solow model: Find the steady state capital-labor ratio for each country. Find the steady state output per worker, and the steady state consumption per worker for each...
Link w DOC d. 16. nase 29. According to the Solow-Swan theory of long-run economic growth, higher rates of saving for, equivalently, investment) lead to a higher income per person and higher consumption per person b. higher income per person and lower consumption per person c. higher income per person but not necessarily higher consumption per person d. higher consumption per person if the saving rate rises from an already high level and lower consumption per person if the saving...
3.) There are two countries, Anihc (country A) and Bapan (country B), with the same production function . However, country A has saving rates of 0.2, depreciation rate of 0.2 and population growth of 0.2; while country B has saving rates of 0.1, depreciation rate of 0.15 and population growth of 0.05. Using the Solow model: a.) Find the steady state capital-labor ratio for each country. b.) Find the steady state output per worker, and the steady state consumption per...
An economy (country A) has a Cobb-Douglas production function: Y = K0.4 (LE) 0.6 The economy has a saving rate of 48 percent, a depreciation rate of 2 percent, a rate of population growth of 1 percent, and a rate of labor-augmenting technological change of 3 percent. Assume there is a second economy (country B) with everything identical to country A except for the rate of population growth, which is 2 percent. Assume there is a third economy (country C)...
Fill in the blanks in the table below. he blanks in the table below. Population growth Inflation Real GDP growth per capita Nominal GDP growth 58 28 -18 Country Svea Bonifay Chaires Drifton Estiffanulga 18 28 08 58 78 Does the rule of 70 predict greater increases in the amount of income for poorer countries when both rich and poor countries have the same growth rate? No, according to the rule of 70, if the growth rate of income is...
10. Which of the following would by itself. reveal the most about a. Its level of capital. b. The number of hours worked. c. Its availability of natural resources. d. Its productivity. the most about a country's standard of living? 11. Which of the following is correct? Although levels of real GDP per person vary substantially from country to country the growth rate of real GDP per person is similar across countries. b. Productivity is not closely linked to government...
1. Country A and country B both have the production function Y = F(K,L)= VKL. (5 Points) Does this production function have constant returns to scale? Explain. (5 Points) What is the per-worker production function, y=f(k)? (10 Points) Assume that neither country experiences population growth or technological progress and that 5 percent of capital depreciates each year. Assume further that country A saves 10 percent of output each year and country B saves 20 percent of output each year. Using...
An economy (country A) has a Cobb-Douglas production function: Y = K0.4 (LE) 0.6 The economy has a saving rate of 48 percent, a depreciation rate of 2 percent, a rate of population growth of 1 percent, and a rate of labor-augmenting technological change of 3 percent. Assume there is a second economy (country B) with everything identical to country A except for the rate of population growth, which is 2 percent. Answer questions 4 and 5 above for country...