In the second edition of this user-friendly book, Olivier de La Grandville provides graduate students and academic researchers with a clear and original introduction to the theory of economic growth, its mechanisms and its challenges. The book has been fully updated to incorporate several important new results and proofs since the first edition, and offers a new solution to the fundamental question: how much should a nation save and invest? In addition to a progressive treatment of dynamic optimization, readers will find intuitive derivations of all central equations of the calculus of…mehr
In the second edition of this user-friendly book, Olivier de La Grandville provides graduate students and academic researchers with a clear and original introduction to the theory of economic growth, its mechanisms and its challenges. The book has been fully updated to incorporate several important new results and proofs since the first edition, and offers a new solution to the fundamental question: how much should a nation save and invest? In addition to a progressive treatment of dynamic optimization, readers will find intuitive derivations of all central equations of the calculus of variations and of optimal control theory. Contrary to dire contemporary predictions, de La Grandville shows that the optimal savings rule not only corresponds to the maximization of future welfare flows for society, but also maximizes the value of society's activity, as well as the total remuneration of labor.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Olivier de La Grandville is Senior Professor at Frankfurt University and Visiting Professor in the Management Science and Engineering Department at Stanford University. He was Professor of Economics at the University of Geneva from 1978 to 2007 and he is the author of seven books on topics ranging from microeconomics to macroeconomics and finance.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Robert M. Solow Preface Introduction Part I. Positive Growth Theory: 1. The welfare of society and economic growth 2. The growth process: an intuitive approach 3. A production function of central importance 4. Poverty traps 5. The CES production function as a general mean in collaboration with Robert M. Solow 6. Why has the elasticity of substitution most often been observed as smaller than 1? And why is it of importance? 7. Capital-labour substitution and economic growth in collaboration with Robert M. Solow 8. The long-term growth rate as a random variable, with an application to the US economy Part II. Optimal Growth Theory: 9. Optimal growth theory: an introduction to the calculus of variations 10. Deriving the central equations of the calculus of variations at a single stroke of the pen 11. Other major tools for optimal growth theory: the Pontryagin maximum principle and the Dorfmanian 12. First applications to optimal growth 13. Optimal growth and the optimal savings rate Part III. A Unified Approach: 14. Preliminaries: interest rates and capital valuation 15. From arbitrage to equilibrium 16. Why is traditional optimal growth theory mute? Restoring its rightful voice 17. Problems in growth: common traits between planned economies and poor countries 18. From Ibn Khaldun to Adam Smith, and a proof of Smith's conjecture 19. Capital and economic growth in the coming centuries In conclusion: on the convergence of ideas and values through civilizations Further reading, data on growth and references Index.
Foreword Robert M. Solow Preface Introduction Part I. Positive Growth Theory: 1. The welfare of society and economic growth 2. The growth process: an intuitive approach 3. A production function of central importance 4. Poverty traps 5. The CES production function as a general mean in collaboration with Robert M. Solow 6. Why has the elasticity of substitution most often been observed as smaller than 1? And why is it of importance? 7. Capital-labour substitution and economic growth in collaboration with Robert M. Solow 8. The long-term growth rate as a random variable, with an application to the US economy Part II. Optimal Growth Theory: 9. Optimal growth theory: an introduction to the calculus of variations 10. Deriving the central equations of the calculus of variations at a single stroke of the pen 11. Other major tools for optimal growth theory: the Pontryagin maximum principle and the Dorfmanian 12. First applications to optimal growth 13. Optimal growth and the optimal savings rate Part III. A Unified Approach: 14. Preliminaries: interest rates and capital valuation 15. From arbitrage to equilibrium 16. Why is traditional optimal growth theory mute? Restoring its rightful voice 17. Problems in growth: common traits between planned economies and poor countries 18. From Ibn Khaldun to Adam Smith, and a proof of Smith's conjecture 19. Capital and economic growth in the coming centuries In conclusion: on the convergence of ideas and values through civilizations Further reading, data on growth and references Index.
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