Enter your search keyword(s):

Click to search our directories-AllWebHunt, Encyclopedic, TopChoice, Or Google, Alexa, About & Yahoo:

 

Untitled Document
Websites

Arts
Movies, Television, Music...

Business
Jobs, Industries, Investing...

Computers
Internet, Software, Hardware...

Games
Video Games, Role playing, Gambling...

Health
Fitness, Medicine, Alternative...

Home
Family, Consumers, Cooking...

Kids & Teens
Arts, School Time, Teen Life...

News
Media, Newspapers, Weather...

Recreation
Travel, Food, Humor...

Reference
Maps, Education, Libraries...

Science
Biology, Psychology, Physics...

Shopping
Autos, Clothing, Gifts...

Society
People, Religion, Issues...

Sports
Baseball, Soccer, Basketball...

Travel
Cruises, Destinations, Reservations...


Country directories
United States, United Kingdom, Europe...


Translated directories
Deutsch, Español, Français...


Articles

Nature

Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Earth science, Ecology, Geography, Physics

Society
Anthropology, Archaeology, Business, Communication, Economics, Government, History, Law, Linguistics, Politics, Psychology, Public affairs, Sociology, State

Technology
Agriculture, Architecture, Engineering, Internet, Transport, Vehicles

Abstraction
Computer science, Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy, Statistics

Culture
Arts and crafts, Dance, Entertainment, Films, Fine arts, Games, Hobbies, Humor, Language, Literature, Media, Music, Recreation, Religion, Sports, Television, Visual arts and design

Human
Education, Family, Food, Health, Housing, Medicine, Personal life

Edit | Discuss Article

Neo-classical growth model

Neo-classical growth model is a term used to sum up the contributions by various authors in the framework of neoclassical economics.

The most important contribution was probably the work by Robert Solow. In the 1950s he developed a relatively simple growth model, which fit the data on US economic growth remarkably well.

A common prediction of neoclassical growth models is that an economy will always move towards a steady state (or "balanced growth path"). In this steady state the growth rate of the economy depends only on the rate of technological progress. Policy measures like tax cuts or investment subsidies are believed to have no effect on this long-run growth rate.

Neoclassical growth theory boils down to saying that long run economic growth comes from technological progress. The next step is then to ask "Where does technological progress come from?", and this question has led to the development of endogenous growth theory.
Source | Copyright


Webmasters: Add your website here:


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
 Submit a Site - Open Directory Project (modified) - Become an Editor

Modified contents copyright 2005. All rights reserved.