Dynamic efficiency
In economics, dynamic efficiency[1] is a situation where it is impossible to make one generation better off without making any other generation worse off. It is closely related to the notion of "golden rule of saving". In general, an economy will fail to be dynamically efficient if the real interest rate is below the growth rate of the economy (sum of the growth rates of population and per capita income).[2]
In the Solow growth model
An economy in the Solow growth model is dynamically inefficient if the savings rate exceeds the Golden Rule savings rate. If the savings rate is greater than the Golden Rule savings rate, a decrease in savings rate will increase consumption per effective unit of labor. A savings rate higher than the Golden Rule savings rate implies that an economy could be better off today and tomorrow by saving less. [3]
In other models
The Ramsey-Cass-Koopmans model does not have dynamic efficiency problems because agents discount the future at some rate β which is less than 1, and their savings rate is endogenous.
The Diamond growth model is not necessarily dynamically efficient because of the overlapping generation setup. In a competitive equilibrium, the growth rate may exceed the interest rate, which entails dynamic inefficiency. This is because agents are finitely lived.[4] However, competitive allocations are dynamically efficient if one augments the Diamond model with land as an additional factor of production.[5]
Are modern economies dynamically efficient?
Abel, Mankiw, Summers, and Zeckhauser (1989)[6] develop a criterion for addressing dynamic efficiency and apply this model to the United States and other OECD countries, suggesting that these countries are indeed dynamically efficient.
Notes
- ^ "Dynamic Efficiency Illustration". agecon2.tamu.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Sims, Eric. "Intermediate Macroeconomics: Economic Growth and the Solow Model" (PDF). Retrieved 24 July 2014.
- ^ Romer, David (2012). Advanced Macroeconomics (4 ed.).
{{cite book}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ Stefan Homburg (1991) Interest and Growth in an Economy with Land. Canadian Journal of Economics 24, pp. 450-459.
- ^ Abel, Andrew; Mankiw, Gregory; Summers, Lawrence; Zeckhauser, Richard (1989). "Assessing Dynamic Efficiency: Theory and Evidence". Review of Economic Studies. 56 (1): 1–20. doi:10.2307/2297746.