The implausible growth effect of partial capital mobility: some neoclassical arithmetic

In the neoclassical growth model of Barro et al. [Am. Econ. Rev. 85 (1) (1995) 103–115], partial capital mobility across economies generates implausibly large growth effects under a standard parameterization of preferences and technology. Reasonable growth effects only occur if substantially less th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Economic modelling 2002, Vol.19 (1), p.25-40
1. Verfasser: Gundlach, Erich
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description In the neoclassical growth model of Barro et al. [Am. Econ. Rev. 85 (1) (1995) 103–115], partial capital mobility across economies generates implausibly large growth effects under a standard parameterization of preferences and technology. Reasonable growth effects only occur if substantially less than the share of physical capital in factor income can serve as collateral for external borrowing. This finding confines the empirical relevance of the open-economy neoclassical growth model to the case of international capital flows, where market imperfections are likely to prevail. But for partial capital mobility across economies such as US states, where market imperfections appear less relevant, the model cannot produce plausible long-run growth effects.
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subjects Capital flow
Capital mobility
Capital movement
Economic growth
Economic theory
Growth models
Growth theory
International monetary relations
Modelling
Neoclassical economics
Neoclassical growth model
Studies
title The implausible growth effect of partial capital mobility: some neoclassical arithmetic
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