Two hundred years ago, the first Industrial Revolution sparked a
dramatic acceleration in the quantity of goods and services
available to the average citizen--a trend of steadily increasing
real income per capita that continues to this day. Since that time,
economists have struggled to develop systematic explanations for
what caused the sudden, rapid increase, why the economy keeps
growing, and why the rate of growth varies in different time
periods and nations. In this book, F. M. Scherer traces the
evolution of economic growth theory from the Industrial Revolution
to the present. Emphasizing technological change as the most
crucial dynamic force for growth, Scherer analyzes early hypotheses
that paid little attention to new technologies, follows the
emergence of theories that increasingly emphasized technological
change, and reviews the current state of economic growth theory.
Pointing out a lack of solid microbehavioral foundations to support
contemporary "new growth" ideas, Scherer then supplies some
foundational "bricks" concerning financial investment and human
capital, and concludes by exploring the prospects for sustaining
rapid growth into the next century. Copublished with the
British-North American Committee
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