Seminar

Two Models of Knowledge Capital Accumulation

Erzo G.J. Luttmer (University of Minnesota and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis)

September 16, 2013, 12:30–14:00

Toulouse

Room MF323

Political Economy/Finance Seminar

Abstract

This paper adds imitation by incumbent firms, and not just by new entrants, to the model of selection and growth developed in Luttmer [2007]. Noisy firm-level innovation and imitation give rise to a long-run growth rate that exceeds the average rate at which individual firms innovate. It can be shown, in simple examples, that the economy converges to a long-run balanced growth path from compactly supported initial productivity distributions. The right tail of the stationary distribution of de-trended productivity is approximately Pareto. The tail index of this distribution depends on the rate at which incumbents are able to imitate only indirectly, through general equilibrium effects of this parameter on the equilibrium growth rate. JEL classification: L110, O330 Keywords: Technology diffusion; Size distribution of firms; Endogenous growth