Capital Maintenance versus Technology Adoption Under Embodied Technical Progress
A BEJM Contributions article.
Abstract
We study an optimal growth model with one-hoss-shay vintage capital, where labor resources can be allocated freely either to production, technology adoption or capital maintenance. Technological progress is partly embodied. Adoption labor increases the level of embodied technical progress. First, we are able to disentangle the amplification-propagation role of maintenance in business fluctuations: in the short run, the response of the model to transitory shocks on total factor productivity in the final good sector are definitely much sharper compared to the counterpart model without maintenance but with the same average depreciation rate. Moreover, the one-hoss shay technology is shown to reinforce this amplification-propagation mechanism. We also find that accelerations in embodied technical progress should be responded by a gradual adoption effort, and capital maintenance should be the preferred instrument in the short run.Submitted: October 5, 2005 · Accepted: August 24, 2006 · Published: September 21, 2006
Originally published in Contributions to Macroeconomics.
Recommended Citation
Boucekkine, Raouf; Martínez, Blanca; and Saglam, Cagri
(2006)
"Capital Maintenance versus Technology Adoption Under Embodied Technical Progress,"
Contributions to Macroeconomics:
Vol. 6
:
Iss.
1, Article 7.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/bejm/contributions/vol6/iss1/art7
