A new framework for analyzing technological change
Yoshinori Shiozawa ()
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Yoshinori Shiozawa: Osaka City University
Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 2020, vol. 30, issue 4, No 5, 989-1034
Abstract:
Abstract Technological evolution is widely thought to be the primary process that brings about economic growth. It is one of the main targets of evolutionary economics, but how technological change induces economic growth has remained unexplained. Based on the new theory of value, this paper explains how technological change leads to long-run improvement in real wage rates and income per capita. Section 2 gives a brief overview of the new theory and presents two theorems (minimal price and the convergence theorem) that afford the basis of analyses in Sections 4 and 5. Before these, Section 3 compares two price systems, traditional and new, and compares efficiency from two points of view. Traditionally economics with equilibrium has been concerned with those conditions that provide allocative efficiency. However, technological evolution comprises a series of half-blind selections of ‘better’ production techniques and exhibits another kind of efficiency that can be named dynamic efficiency. The latter is more important than the former. Allocative efficiency is self-destructive, while dynamic efficiency is cumulative in its effects. Section 4 shows how technological change works cumulatively and how it leads to real wage increases and income per capita. Section 5 shows that the new theory can explain the emergence and growth of global value supply chains as a part of technology choice arising through international trade. This paper is mainly focused on supply-side theory, while problems concerning the demand side are considered in Section 6. Section 7 concludes.
Keywords: Technological change; Evolutionary process; Economic growth; Dynamic efficiency; Global value chains; D21; D24; D51; D81; E14; F12; O33; O40 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1007/s00191-020-00704-5
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