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Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales - - libros, artículos de revistas,
ponencias de eventos, etc. -
» Resultado:
3 registros
Registro 1 de 3 |
Autor: |
Galor, Oded - Weil, David-N - |
Título: |
Population, Technology, and Growth: From Malthusian Stagnation to the Demographic Transition and Beyond |
Fuente: |
American Economic Review. v.90, n.4. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 806-28 |
Año: |
Sept. 2000 |
Resumen: |
This paper develops a unified growth model that captures the historical evolution of population, technology, and output. It encompasses the endogenous transition between three regimes that have characterized economic development. The economy evolves from a Malthusian regime, where technological progress is slow and population growth prevents any sustained rise in income per capita, into a Post-Malthusian regime, where technological progress rises and population growth absorbs only part of output growth. Ultimately, a demographic transition reverses the positive relationship between income and population growth, and the economy enters a Modern Growth regime, with reduced population growth and sustained income growth. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
Registro 2 de 3 |
Autor: |
Galor, Oded - Tsiddon, Daniel - |
Título: |
Technological Progress, Mobility, and Economic Growth |
Fuente: |
American Economic Review. v.87, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 363-82 |
Año: |
June 1997 |
Resumen: |
This paper analyzes the relationship between technological progress, wage inequality, intergenerational earnings mobility, and economic growth. In periods of major technological inventions, a decline in the relative importance of initial conditions raises inequality, enhances mobility, and generates a larger concentration of high-ability individuals in technologically advanced sectors, stimulating future technological progress and growth. However, once technologies become more accessible, mobility is diminished and inequality decreases but becomes more persistent. The reduction in the concentration of ability in technologically advanced sectors diminishes the likelihood of technological breakthroughs and slows future growth. User friendliness, therefore, becomes unfriendly to future economic growth. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
Registro 3 de 3 |
Autor: |
Galor, Oded - Weil, David-N - |
Título: |
The Gender Gap, Fertility, and Growth |
Fuente: |
American Economic Review. v.86, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 374-87 |
Año: |
June 1996 |
Resumen: |
This paper examines a novel mechanism linking fertility and growth. There are three components to the model: first, increases in capital per worker raise women’s relative wages, since capital is more complementary to women’s labor input than to men’s. Second, increasing women’s relative wages reduces fertility by raising the cost of children more than household income. And third, lower fertility raises the level of capital per worker. This positive feedback loop generates a demographic transition: a rapid decline in fertility accompanied by accelerated output growth. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
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