Seminar 22 April 2013

Andreas Irmen, University of Luxembourg

Monday, April 22, 2013 - 13:00 to 14:00

CAPITAL- AND LABOR-SAVING TECHNICAL CHANGE IN AN AGING ECONOMY

Abstract

Does population aging and the associated increase in the old-age dependency ratio affect economic growth ? The answer is given in a novel analytical framework that allows for population aging to affect endogenous capital- and labor-saving technical change. The short-run analysis reveals that population aging induces more labor- and less capital-saving technical change as it increases the relative scarcity of labor with respect to capital. Due to external contemporaneous knowledge spill-overs across innovating firms induced technical change has a first-order effect on current aggregate income. In the long-run capital-saving technical vanishes, and the economy’s growth rate reflects purely labor-augmenting technical change. This implies that the economy’s steady-state growth rate is independent of its age structure: neither a higher life-expectancy nor a decline in fertility affects economic growth in the long run.

 

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