The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intelligence suggests that there may be an upcoming wave of substitution of human labor by machines. We argue that these new technologies may lead to so-called perpetual growth, i.e. growth of per capita income with a non-progressing state of technology. We specify an exact parameter threshold beyond which perpetual growth emerges, and argue that ongoing technological change may bring the threshold in reach. We also show that in a state of perpetual growth, factor-eliminating technological progress reduces the role of labor in the production process and that this leads to a rising wage rate but ever-declining share of wage income. We present simul...
Persistently increasing wage inequality, polarization of the wage distribution, and stagnating real ...
This paper builds a model of growth through industrialization, where machines replace workers in a g...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
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...
Persistently increasing wage inequality, polarization of the wage distribution, and stagnating real ...
This paper builds a model of growth through industrialization, where machines replace workers in a g...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The recent literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotization and artificial intel...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
The current literature on the economic effects of machine learning, robotisation and artificial inte...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
We study the long run implications of workplace automation induced by capital accumulation. We descr...
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...
Persistently increasing wage inequality, polarization of the wage distribution, and stagnating real ...
This paper builds a model of growth through industrialization, where machines replace workers in a g...
We introduce automation into a standard model of capital accumulation and show that (i) there is the...