The Development problem under embodiment

Boucekkine, Raouf;Martinez, Blanca;Saglam, Cagri
(2003) , 28 pages

Files

2003-6.pdf
  • Open Access
  • Adobe PDF
  • 330.91 KB

Details

Authors
  • Boucekkine, RaoufUCLouvain
    Author
  • Martinez, BlancaUniversidad de Alicante
    Author
  • Saglam, CagriUCLouvain
    Author
Abstract
We study technology adoption in an optimal growth model with embodied technical change. The economy consists of the final good sector, the capital sector, and the technology sector whose role is the imitation of exogenous innovations. Labor resources are scarce. They are freely allocated to the technology and final good sectors. The final good is freely allocated to consumption and to the capital sector. We analytically characterize the optimal allocation decisions in the long run. Using a calibrated version of the model, we find that an acceleration in the rate of embodied technical change should not be responded by an immediate and strong adoption effort. Instead, adoption labor should decrease in the short run, and the optimal technological gap is shown to increase either in the short or in the long run. The state of the institutions and policies around the technology sector is key in the design of the optimal adoption timing.
Affiliations

Citations

Boucekkine, R., Martinez, B., & Saglam, C. (2003). The Development problem under embodiment (IRES Discussion papers 2003/6). https://hdl.handle.net/2078.5/34262