Growth with Age-Dependent Preferences
Halvor Mehlum,
Ragnar Torvik and
Simone Valente
No No 14/2018, Working Papers from Centre for Applied Macro- and Petroleum economics (CAMP), BI Norwegian Business School
Abstract:
We study the consequences of age-dependent preferences for economic growth and structural change in a two-sector model with overlapping generations and nondimishing returns to capital. Savings and accumulation rates depend on the relative price of services consumed by old agents and on the intergenerational distribution of income. The feedback effects originating in preferences and income distribution yield three possible long-run growth outcomes: sustained endogenous growth, decumulation traps, and bounded accumulation. In the endogenous growth scenario, the transition features rising savings and accumulation rates accompanied by distributional shifts in favor of young workers, growing employment and rising prices in the service sector. Traps are triggered by initially low capital in manufacturing and low employment in services. Bounded accumulation yielding zero long-run growth in per capita incomes is induced by preferences, not by diminishing returns to capital.
Keywords: Endogenous growth; structural change; overlapping generations (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 18 pages
Date: 2018-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge and nep-gro
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Journal Article: Growth with age-dependent preferences (2020) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bny:wpaper:0072
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