ECON 510 Chapter 8
If the per-worker production function is given by y = k1/2, the saving rate (s) is 0.2, and the depreciation rate is 0.1, then the steady-state ratio of capital to labor is:
4
The steady-state level of capital occurs when the change in the capital stock (Δk) equals:
0
If the capital stock equals 200 units in year 1 and the depreciation rate is 5 percent per year, then in year 2, assuming no new or replacement investment, the capital stock would equal _____ units.
190
If the per-worker production function is given by y = k1/2, the saving ratio is 0.2, and the depreciation rate is 0.1, then the steady-state ratio of output per worker (y) is:
2
______ cause(s) the capital stock to rise, while ______ cause(s) the capital stock to fall.
Investment; depreciation
A higher saving rate leads to a:
larger capital stock and a higher level of output in the long run.
In the Solow growth model, the steady-state occurs when:
capital per worker is constant
In the Solow growth model of Chapter 8, where s is the saving rate, y is output per worker, and i is investment per worker, consumption per worker (c) equals:
(1 - s)y
If the per-worker production function is given by y = k1/2, the saving ratio is 0.3, and the depreciation rate is 0.1, then the steady-state ratio of capital to labor is:
9
In the Solow model, it is assumed that a(n) ______ fraction of capital wears out as the capital-labor ratio increases.
constant
The consumption function in the Solow model assumes that society saves a:
constant proportion of income
In the Solow growth model, if investment is less than depreciation, the capital stock will ______ and output will ______ until the steady state is attained.
decrease; decrease
Unlike the long-run classical model in Chapter 3, the Solow growth model:
describes changes in the economy over time
In the Solow growth model, with a given production function, depreciation rate, no technological change, and no population growth, a higher saving rate produces a:
higher steady-state level of output per worker
The Solow growth model describes:
how saving, population growth, and technological change affect output over time.
In the Solow growth model the saving rate determines the allocation of output between:
investment and consumption.
In the Solow growth model with no population growth and no technological progress, the higher the steady capital-per-worker ratio, the higher the steady-state:
level of output per worker
The production function y = f(k) means:
output per worker is a function of capital per worker
In the Solow growth model of Chapter 8, investment equals:
saving
Investment per worker (i) as a function of the saving ratio (s) and output per worker (f(k)) may be expressed as:
sf(k)
When f(k) is drawn on a graph with increases in k noted along the horizontal axis, the slope of the line denotes:
the marginal product of capital
The change in capital stock per worker (Δk) may be expressed as a function of s = the saving ratio, f(k) = output per worker, k = capital per worker, and δ = the depreciation rate, by the equation:
Δk = sf(k) - δk.