The Solow–Swan model was an extension to the 1946 Harrod–Domar model that dropped the restrictive assumption that only capital contributes to growth (so long as there is sufficient labor to use all capital). Important contributions to the model came from the work done by Solow and by Swan in 1956, who independently developed relatively simple growth models. Solow's model fitted available data on
US economic growth with some success. In 1987 Solow was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Economics for his work. Today, economists use Solow's sources-of-growth accounting to estimate the separate effects on economic growth of technological change, capital, and labor. The Solow model is also one of the most widely used models in economics to explain economic growth.
Extension to the Harrod–Domar model Solow extended the Harrod–Domar model by adding labor as a
factor of production and capital-output ratios that are not fixed as they are in the Harrod–Domar model. These refinements allow increasing
capital intensity to be distinguished from technological progress. Solow sees the
fixed proportions production function as a "crucial assumption" to the instability results in the Harrod-Domar model. His own work expands upon this by exploring the implications of alternative specifications, namely the
Cobb–Douglas and the more general
constant elasticity of substitution (CES). in the history of economics, featured in many economic textbooks, recent reappraisal of Harrod's work has contested it. One central criticism is that Harrod's original piece was neither mainly concerned with economic growth nor did he explicitly use a fixed proportions production function.
Long-run implications A standard Solow model predicts that in the long run, economies converge to their
balanced growth equilibrium and that permanent growth of per capita income is achievable only through technological progress. Both shifts in saving and in population growth cause only level effects in the long-run (i.e. in the absolute value of real income per capita). An interesting implication of Solow's model is that poor countries should grow faster and eventually catch-up to richer countries. This
convergence could be explained by: • Lags in the diffusion on knowledge. Differences in real income might shrink as poor countries receive better technology and information; • Efficient allocation of international capital flows, since the rate of return on capital should be higher in poorer countries. In practice, this is seldom observed and is known as
Lucas' paradox; • A mathematical implication of the model (assuming poor countries have not yet reached their steady state).
Baumol attempted to verify this empirically and found a very strong correlation between a countries' output growth over a long period of time (1870 to 1979) and its initial wealth. His findings were later contested by
DeLong who claimed that both the non-randomness of the sampled countries, and potential for significant measurement errors for estimates of real income per capita in 1870, biased Baumol's findings. DeLong concludes that there is little evidence to support the convergence theory.
Assumptions The key assumption of the Solow–Swan growth model is that capital is subject to
diminishing returns in a closed economy. • Given a fixed stock of labor, the impact on output of the last unit of capital accumulated will always be less than the one before. • Assuming for simplicity no technological progress or labor force growth, diminishing returns implies that at some point the amount of new capital produced is only just enough to make up for the amount of existing capital lost due to depreciation. At this point, because of the assumptions of no technological progress or labor force growth, we can see the economy ceases to grow. • Assuming non-zero rates of labor growth complicate matters somewhat, but the basic logic still applies – in the short-run, the rate of growth slows as diminishing returns take effect and the economy converges to a constant "steady-state" rate of growth (that is,
no economic growth per-capita). • Including non-zero technological progress is very similar to the assumption of non-zero workforce growth, in terms of "effective labor": a new steady state is reached with constant output per
worker-hour required for a unit of output. However, in this case, per-capita output grows at the rate of technological progress in the "steady-state" (that is, the rate of
productivity growth).
Variations in the effects of productivity In the Solow–Swan model the unexplained change in the growth of output after accounting for the effect of capital accumulation is called the
Solow residual. This residual measures the exogenous increase in
total factor productivity (TFP) during a particular time period. The increase in TFP is often attributed entirely to technological progress, but it also includes any permanent improvement in the efficiency with which factors of production are combined over time. Implicitly TFP growth includes any permanent productivity improvements that result from improved management practices in the private or public sectors of the economy. Paradoxically, even though TFP growth is exogenous in the model, it cannot be observed, so it can only be estimated in conjunction with the simultaneous estimate of the effect of capital accumulation on growth during a particular time period. The model can be reformulated in slightly different ways using different productivity assumptions, or different measurement metrics: • Average Labor Productivity (
ALP) is economic output per labor hour. •
Multifactor productivity (
MFP) is output divided by a weighted average of capital and labor inputs. The weights used are usually based on the aggregate input shares either factor earns. This ratio is often quoted as: 33% return to capital and 67% return to labor (in Western nations). In a growing economy, capital is accumulated faster than people are born, so the denominator in the growth function under the MFP calculation is growing faster than in the ALP calculation. Hence, MFP growth is almost always lower than ALP growth. (Therefore, measuring in ALP terms increases the apparent
capital deepening effect.) MFP is measured by the "
Solow residual", not ALP. == Mathematics of the model ==