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The Manhattan metaphor

Publication ,  Journal Article
Peretto, PF; Connolly, M
Published in: Journal of Economic Growth
December 1, 2007

Fixed operating costs draw a sharp distinction between endogenous growth based on horizontal and vertical innovation: a larger number of product lines puts pressure on an economy's resources; greater productivity of existing product lines does not. Consequently, the only plausible engine of endogenous growth is vertical innovation whereby progress along the quality or cost ladder does not require the replication of fixed costs. Is, then, product variety expansion irrelevant? No. The two dimensions of technology are complementary in that using one and the other produces a more comprehensive theory of economic growth. The vertical dimension allows endogenous growth unconstrained by endowments, the horizontal provides the mechanism that translates changes in aggregate variables into changes in product-level variables, which ultimately drive incentives to push the technological frontier in the vertical dimension. We show that the potential for exponential growth due to an externality that makes entry costs fall linearly with the number of products, combined with the limited carrying capacity of the system due to fixed operating costs, yields logistic dynamics for the number of products. This desirable property allows us to provide a closed-form solution for the model's transition path and thereby derive analytically the welfare effects of changes in parameters and policy variables. Our Manhattan Metaphor illustrates conceptually why we obtain this mathematical representation when we simply add fixed operating costs to the standard modeling of variety expansion. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007.

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Published In

Journal of Economic Growth

DOI

ISSN

1381-4338

Publication Date

December 1, 2007

Volume

12

Issue

4

Start / End Page

329 / 350

Related Subject Headings

  • Economics
  • 3803 Economic theory
  • 3801 Applied economics
  • 3502 Banking, finance and investment
  • 1403 Econometrics
  • 1402 Applied Economics
  • 1401 Economic Theory
 

Citation

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Peretto, P. F., & Connolly, M. (2007). The Manhattan metaphor. Journal of Economic Growth, 12(4), 329–350. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10887-007-9023-1
Peretto, P. F., and M. Connolly. “The Manhattan metaphor.” Journal of Economic Growth 12, no. 4 (December 1, 2007): 329–50. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10887-007-9023-1.
Peretto PF, Connolly M. The Manhattan metaphor. Journal of Economic Growth. 2007 Dec 1;12(4):329–50.
Peretto, P. F., and M. Connolly. “The Manhattan metaphor.” Journal of Economic Growth, vol. 12, no. 4, Dec. 2007, pp. 329–50. Scopus, doi:10.1007/s10887-007-9023-1.
Peretto PF, Connolly M. The Manhattan metaphor. Journal of Economic Growth. 2007 Dec 1;12(4):329–350.
Journal cover image

Published In

Journal of Economic Growth

DOI

ISSN

1381-4338

Publication Date

December 1, 2007

Volume

12

Issue

4

Start / End Page

329 / 350

Related Subject Headings

  • Economics
  • 3803 Economic theory
  • 3801 Applied economics
  • 3502 Banking, finance and investment
  • 1403 Econometrics
  • 1402 Applied Economics
  • 1401 Economic Theory