Structural Change and the Kaldor Facts in a Growth Model With Relative Price Effects and Non‐Gorman Preferences
U.S. data reveal three facts: (1) the share of goods in total expenditure declines at a constant rate over time, (2) the price of goods relative to services declines at a constant rate over time, and (3) poor households spend a larger fraction of their budget on goods than do rich households. I provide a macroeconomic model with non‐Gorman preferences that rationalizes these facts, along with the aggregate Kaldor facts. The model is parsimonious and admits an analytical solution. Its functional form allows a decomposition of U.S. structural change into an income and substitution effect. Estimates from micro data show each of these effects to be of roughly equal importance.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Boppart, Timo |
Published in: |
Econometrica. - Econometric Society. - Vol. 82.2014, 11, p. 2167-2196
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Publisher: |
Econometric Society |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
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