Crescimento econômico e distribuição
Economia

Crescimento econômico e distribuição


Solow writes,
if the economy is growing at g percent per year, and if it saves s percent of its national income each year, the self-reproducing capital-income ratio is s / g (10 / 2 in the example). Piketty suggests that global growth of output will slow in the coming century from 3 percent to 1.5 percent annually. (This is the sum of the growth rates of population and productivity, both of which he expects to diminish.) He puts the world saving / investment rate at about 10 percent. So he expects the capital-income ratio to climb eventually to something near 7 (or 10 / 1.5). This is a big deal, as will emerge. He is quite aware that the underlying assumptions could turn out to be wrong; no one can see a century ahead. But it could plausibly go this way.
Mais 



loading...

- "bolsas Familias" Americanas
A Nation of Government Dependents?49% of U.S. Population Lives in Households Receiving Government BenefitsVeronique de Rugy"... In 2010, 49 percent — or nearly half — of the U.S. population lived in a household receiving government assistance. According...

- Taxa De Investimentos Do Brasil Insuficiente Para Manter Crescimento
Low Investment-to-GDP Rate Threatens Growth in BrazilApril 1, 2011 By LBB Staff ReporterBrazil’s rate of fixed investment as a percentage of GDP is too low to achieve sustainable economic expansion of 4.5 percent annually, according to Albert Fishlow,...

- Crescimento Econômico - Comentário Do Banco Central
-- Brazilian central bank President Henrique Meirelles said he’s “comfortable” with the current pace of economic growth, adding that expansion will slow to a level consistent with long-term equilibrium. Meirelles said gross domestic product will...

-
Why is Brazil "Underdeveloped"?John H. Coatsworth The numbers tell the story (see the table). Brazil is underdeveloped because its economy failed to grow or grew too slowly for most of its history. In the colonial era, sugar, gold and slavery did not...

- Petrobras
Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Petroleo Brasileiro SA, the investor darling among the world's largest oil companies in the first half of the year, has become the biggest loser. Petrobras, as Brazil's state-controlled oil producer is known, is the worst...



Economia








.