ELEMENTS OF THE NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH THEORY
Author(s) -
Florina Popa
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
studies and scientific researches economics edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2344-1321
pISSN - 2066-561X
DOI - 10.29358/sceco.v0i20.296
Subject(s) - economics , growth theory , growth accounting , neoclassical economics , productivity , innovation economics , solow residual , technological change , growth model , technical progress , capital accumulation , macroeconomics , total factor productivity , profit (economics)
One of the relevant components of the contemporary economic science is the economic growth theory, the economic background of the time leading to new guidelines of the research. The neoclassical growth theory - the core of modern analysis - explains how the capital accumulation and technological changes affect the economy, significant for the analysis of the economic growth process being the Solow’s neoclassical growth model. The paper brief describes the elements of the economic growth model developed by Solow, both for the situation when it allows the explanation of extensive growth and that wherein the growth is of intensive nature, as a result of the intervention of exogenous technical progress – a determinant of factors productivity growth. It is highlighted the importance of the exogenous neoclassical model, proposed by Solow, who showed the determinant role of the technical progress in the economic growth phenomenon.
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