Early models of Schumpeterian growth incorporate scale effects predicting that large economies grow faster than small economies, and that population growth causes accelerating per capita income growth. An absence of clear empirical evidence for these scale effects has led some researchers to question the foundations underlying the Schumpeterian approach to growth. This paper reviews empirical evidence on the relationship between scale and growth, and recent attempts to construct Schumpeterian growth models without scale effects.Economic growth , R&D , Scale effects
The recent vintage of R&D-based models of long-run growth shifts the focus from the whole econom...
Growth models of the second generation type, e.g. the Jones (1995) or Young (1998) model, all exhibi...
This thesis presents a comparative analysis of the neo-classical and evolutionary theories of growth...
One of the main issues associated with recent R&D-based growth models is their prediction concerning...
Schumpeterian growth is a particular type of economic growth that is based on the endogenous introdu...
Modern Schumpeterian growth theory focuses on the product line as the main locus of innovation and e...
Empirical work has refuted the prediction of new or endogenous growth theory that growth exhibits a ...
This paper gives an overview on the topic of scale effects in idea-based growth models in a closed e...
This paper analyzes the link between the fact that fully endogenous growth models exhibit (or not) t...
Standard R&D growth models have two disturbing properties: the presence of scale effects (i.e., the ...
This paper constructs a two-country (Home and Foreign) general equilibrium model of Schumpeterian gr...
This paper constructs a two-country (Home and Foreign) general equilibrium model of Schumpeterian gr...
In a set of influential papers, Charles Jones (1995a, 1995b, 1999) argued that R&D based endogen...
This paper presents a simple R&D-driven endogenous growth model to shed light on some puzzling econo...
Abstract Modern Schumpeterian growth theory focuses on the product line as the main locus of innovat...
The recent vintage of R&D-based models of long-run growth shifts the focus from the whole econom...
Growth models of the second generation type, e.g. the Jones (1995) or Young (1998) model, all exhibi...
This thesis presents a comparative analysis of the neo-classical and evolutionary theories of growth...
One of the main issues associated with recent R&D-based growth models is their prediction concerning...
Schumpeterian growth is a particular type of economic growth that is based on the endogenous introdu...
Modern Schumpeterian growth theory focuses on the product line as the main locus of innovation and e...
Empirical work has refuted the prediction of new or endogenous growth theory that growth exhibits a ...
This paper gives an overview on the topic of scale effects in idea-based growth models in a closed e...
This paper analyzes the link between the fact that fully endogenous growth models exhibit (or not) t...
Standard R&D growth models have two disturbing properties: the presence of scale effects (i.e., the ...
This paper constructs a two-country (Home and Foreign) general equilibrium model of Schumpeterian gr...
This paper constructs a two-country (Home and Foreign) general equilibrium model of Schumpeterian gr...
In a set of influential papers, Charles Jones (1995a, 1995b, 1999) argued that R&D based endogen...
This paper presents a simple R&D-driven endogenous growth model to shed light on some puzzling econo...
Abstract Modern Schumpeterian growth theory focuses on the product line as the main locus of innovat...
The recent vintage of R&D-based models of long-run growth shifts the focus from the whole econom...
Growth models of the second generation type, e.g. the Jones (1995) or Young (1998) model, all exhibi...
This thesis presents a comparative analysis of the neo-classical and evolutionary theories of growth...