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Documents Growiec, Jakub 2 results

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Washington, DC

"We propose a “hardware–software” framework that offers a new perspective on the mechanisms of long-run economic growth. Based on first principles, it assumes that output is generated through purposefully initiated physical action. Production needs energy and information, provided by respective factors: hardware (“brawn”), including physical labor, physical capital and compute, and software (“brains”), encompassing human cognitive work and digital software, in particular artificial intelligence (AI). Hardware and software are essential and complementary in production, whereas their constituent components are mutually substitutable. The framework generalizes the neoclassical model with capital and labor, models with capital–skill complementarity and skill-biased technical change, and selected unified growth theories. We provide an empirical quantification of hardware and software in the U.S., 1968–2019, documenting a rising share of physical capital in hardware (mechanization) and digital software in software (automation); as a whole software has been growing systematically faster than hardware. Accumulation of human capital and digital software were the key contributors to U.S. economic growth. Looking into the future through the lens of the hardware–software framework, we expect full automation of production by transformative AI and an order-of-magnitude acceleration of economic growth."
"We propose a “hardware–software” framework that offers a new perspective on the mechanisms of long-run economic growth. Based on first principles, it assumes that output is generated through purposefully initiated physical action. Production needs energy and information, provided by respective factors: hardware (“brawn”), including physical labor, physical capital and compute, and software (“brains”), encompassing human cognitive work and ...

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Déposez votre fichier ici pour le déplacer vers cet enregistrement.
V

Frankfurt am Main

"Labor's share of income has attracted interest in recent years reflecting its apparent decline. These falls, witnessed across many countries, are usually deemed undesirable. Any such assertion, however, begs the question of what is the socially optimal labor share. We address this question using a micro-founded endogenous growth model calibrated on US data. We find that in our central calibration the socially optimal labor share is 17% (11 pp) above the decentralized equilibrium, calibrated to match the average observed in history. We also study the dependence of both long-run growth equilibria on model parameters and relate our results to Piketty's “laws of Capitalism”. Finally, we demonstrate that cyclical movements in factor income shares are socially optimal and that the decentralized equilibrium typically does not generate excess volatility."
"Labor's share of income has attracted interest in recent years reflecting its apparent decline. These falls, witnessed across many countries, are usually deemed undesirable. Any such assertion, however, begs the question of what is the socially optimal labor share. We address this question using a micro-founded endogenous growth model calibrated on US data. We find that in our central calibration the socially optimal labor share is 17% (11 pp) ...

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