Event

Research Economic Seminar: The Supply of Hours Worked and Endogenous Growth Cycles

  • Conférencier  Ka-Kit IONG, Department of Economics and Management, Université du Luxembourg

  • Lieu

    Online via Webex

    LU

  • Thème(s)
    Sciences économiques & gestion

We show that declining hours of work may give rise to growth cycles. This is accomplished in an overlapping generations model where individuals are endowed with Boppart-Krusell preferences (Boppart and Krusell (2020)), i. e., the wage elasticity of their supply of hours worked is negative. On the supply side, economic growth is due to the expansion of consumption-good varieties through endogenous research. We show that a sufficiently negative equilibrium elasticity of the individual supply of hours worked to an expansion in the set of consumption-good varieties opens up the possibility of growth cycles where the economy fluctuates between two regimes, one with and the other without an active research sector. We identify period-2 and period-3 cycles, conclude with Li and Yorke (1975) that cycles of any periodicity exists, and generalize our findings to period-n cycles. We show that the possibility of cycles occurs under empirically plausible conditions. We emphasize that the economics of cycles is linked to the pricing of shares in the asset market.