Distribution-Led Growth in the Long Run

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Distribution-Led Growth in the Long Run
Abstract
This paper examines the long-run fluctuations in growth and distribution through the prism of wage- and profit-led growth. It argues that the relation between distribution of income and growth changes over time and proposes an endogenous mechanism that leads to fluctuations between wage- and profit-led periods. The ephemeral character of distribution-led regimes needs to be taken into account when someone estimates empirically the effect of a change in distribution on utilization and growth. The model is a linear version of Goodwin's predator-prey model, but with a reversal of the roles for predator and prey; this is another way to conceptualize the symbiosis between the two classes within a capitalist economy. The aforementioned argument is also examined in relation to the double movement of Karl Polanyi and the inverse U-shaped curve proposed by Simon Kuznets.
Publication
Review of Keynesian Economics
Volume
4
Issue
4
Pages
391-408
Date
2016
Journal Abbr
Review of Keynesian Economics
Language
English
ISSN
20495323
Citation
Nikiforos, Michalis. 2016. “Distribution-Led Growth in the Long Run.” Review of Keynesian Economics 4(4): 391–408.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • aggregate factor income distribution
  • aggregate human capital
  • aggregate labor productivity
  • business fluctuations
  • capacity
  • capital
  • cycles
  • employment
  • general aggregative models: Marxian
  • intangible capital
  • intergenerational income distribution
  • investment
  • Kaleckian
  • one, two, and multisector growth models
  • Sraffian
  • unemployment
  • wages

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