The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial intelligence suggests that there may be an upcoming wave of substitution of human labour by machines (including software). We take this as a reason to rethink the traditional ways in which technological change has been represented in economic models. In doing so, we contribute to the recent literature on so-called perpetual growth, i.e., growth of per capita income without technological progress. When technology embodied in capital goods are sufficiently advanced, per capita growth becomes possible with a non-progressing state of technology. We present a simple Solow-like growth model that incorporates these ideas. The model predicts a rising wag...
ABSTRACT: The Artificial Intelligence (AI) evolution is a broad set of methods, algorithms, and tech...
To rationalize a substantial income share of labor despite progressive task automation over the cent...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
We construct an endogenous growth model of directed technical change with automation (the introducti...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
This paper builds a model of industrialization and growth. In this model machines replace workers in...
With the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, the application of robots is ...
A simple exogenous growth model gives conservative estimates of the economic implications of machine...
Abstract. In order to understand economic growth and distribution one should not primarily look for ...
This paper develops a model that reproduces the essential aspects of the recent ICT-based economy us...
This paper presents a model of endogenous growth with directed technical change to examine the impli...
An endogenous growth model is presented that combines two well-known 'sources of growth': technologi...
A unified growth theory is developed that accounts for the roughly constant living standards display...
ABSTRACT: The Artificial Intelligence (AI) evolution is a broad set of methods, algorithms, and tech...
To rationalize a substantial income share of labor despite progressive task automation over the cent...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
We construct an endogenous growth model of directed technical change with automation (the introducti...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
This paper builds a model of industrialization and growth. In this model machines replace workers in...
With the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, the application of robots is ...
A simple exogenous growth model gives conservative estimates of the economic implications of machine...
Abstract. In order to understand economic growth and distribution one should not primarily look for ...
This paper develops a model that reproduces the essential aspects of the recent ICT-based economy us...
This paper presents a model of endogenous growth with directed technical change to examine the impli...
An endogenous growth model is presented that combines two well-known 'sources of growth': technologi...
A unified growth theory is developed that accounts for the roughly constant living standards display...
ABSTRACT: The Artificial Intelligence (AI) evolution is a broad set of methods, algorithms, and tech...
To rationalize a substantial income share of labor despite progressive task automation over the cent...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...