- The “rule of 72” says that any sum growing at the rate of X
percent per year will double in approximately years. For
two sums growing at the rates of X percent and Y percent per
year, the difference between the two sums will double in
approximately years. The rule of 72 is only an
approximation, but at low annual rates of growth it is extremely
accurate. - A simple example of a production function is
This equation says that to find the amount of GDP produced,
multiply the amount of labour by the amount of capital, take the
square root, and multiply the result by the constant z, which is a
technology parameter. This production function has positive but
diminishing marginal returns to either factor. This can be seen by
evaluating the first and second partial derivatives and showing
the first derivatives to be positive and the second derivatives to
be negative.
For example,
and
- The production function displays constant
returns to scale. To see this, multiply both L and K by the same
72 /X
72 /(X−Y)
GDP=z(LK)
∂G∂KDP = z⋅L > 0
1 / 2
2 ⋅K^1 /^2
∂ = < 0
(^2) GDP
∂K^2
z⋅L^1 /^2
4 ⋅K^3 /^2
GDP=z(LK)^1 /^2