廣島大學經濟論叢 Volume 25 Issue 3
published_at 2002-03-12

Home Production and External Effects on Labor-Augmenting Technological Progress <Articles>

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Abstract
In an economy studied in this paper, the ratio of aggregate home consumption to aggregate market consumption, a proxy to the economy-wide resource allocation between market and home sectors, is assumed to have an external effect, either positive or negative, on the rate of labor-augmenting technological progress. It will be shown that a necessary condition for this model to have multiple steady states depends on relative factor intensity between the two sectors. When home production is more labor-intensive, as suggested by many authors, and when people learn more at home than at market, the long-run outcome might depend on both history and (self-fulfilling) expectation.