全球增长、老龄化以及代际和代内不平等

Global growth, ageing, and inequality across and within generations

Oxford Review of Economic Policy · 2010
被引 12
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

构建了一个包含六种商品、五个地区、三种技能组和91个重叠世代的一般均衡模型,分析中国和印度快速技术进步和庞大人口对全球资本和劳动力供给的影响,以及由此导致的发达国家非熟练工人相对工资下降。

Abstract

The world's leading economies, both developed and developing, are engaged in an ever-changing economic symbiosis that is governed in large part by demographics and technological change, but also by pension, healthcare, and other fiscal policies. This interconnected economic evolution--what economists call general equilibrium growth--holds important implications for inequality across and within generations. This paper presents such a general equilibrium model. It features six goods, five regions, three skill groups, and 91 overlapping generations, each making life-cycle consumption and labour-supply decisions. The model pays special attention to the evolution of the Chinese and Indian economies. Thanks to their rapid technological advance and vast populations, these nations will play an ever more dominant role in determining the world's supplies of capital and labour, particularly unskilled labour. The good news for the developed world is that China and India will supply it with major amounts of capital over time, thanks to their high saving rates. The bad news is that these economies are also likely to bring much more unskilled relative to skilled labour into the market, which will, over time, dramatically reduce the relative wages of unskilled workers in the US, Europe, and Japan. This relative increase in the world supply of unskilled workers reflects, in large part, the simple fact that China and India are gradually bringing each of their skill groups up to Western standards, but have relatively more unskilled labour in their work forces. Copyright 2010, Oxford University Press.

全球经济增长人口老龄化代际不平等一般均衡模型