
Abstract Optimal decisions by economic agents regarding the utilization of capital lead to empirically plausible speeds of convergence in one-sector models of economic growth. The relationship between depreciation and capital utilization plays a crucial role in slowing down convergence to the steady state. Cross-country differences in the extent to which the capital utilization decision is internalized along the transition path may lead to differences in convergence rates, even for countries with similar initial and terminal conditions. Finally, by assuming a constant depreciation rate and full capital utilization, standard growth models may be overstating the magnitude of the steady-state equilibrium.
Economic growth, capital utilization, speed of convergence, depreciation, jel: jel:E0, jel: jel:E2, jel: jel:D9
Economic growth, capital utilization, speed of convergence, depreciation, jel: jel:E0, jel: jel:E2, jel: jel:D9
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