Why Does Technology Advance in Cycles?
Abstract
Long-run technological progress is cyclical because drastic innovations that introduce new technological opportunity are only profitable at times when repeated incremental innovation has nearly exhausted existing technological opportunity and driven entrepreneurial profit and income growth towards zero. The article presents a 'technological opportunity model' where endogenous drastic and incremental innovations interact with exogenous discoveries in an idealized metric technology space. New ideas are created by convex combinations of existing ideas. Diminishing technological opportunity results in lower profits and growth, which then makes costly and risky drastic innovations profitable again. This relationship between intense drastic innovation intensity and poor levels of economic growth receives some empirical support.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2001Author
Olsson, Ola
Keywords
technology; growth; long waves; cycles; techno-logical paradigms; innovations
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 38
Language
en