Paper presented at the International Schumpeter Society Conference, Stockholm, 2-5 June 1996
DRUID WORKING PAPER NO. 96-13
Esben Sloth Andersen
Department of Business Studies, Aalborg University. E-mail esa@business.auc.dk.
Abstract
The evolutionary model presented in this paper depicts an industrial sector with a varying degree of economic roundaboutness, i.e. vertical division of labour between producers and users of different types of intermediate products that are ultimately used for the production of a single final product. To include this vertical aspect of industrial dynamics, the model adds the concept of production trees to the evolutionary models of Schumpeterian competition. The specification of this concept suggests the use of the notions of graph theory and the related algorithms of computer science in the treatment of industrial novelty, including structural innovations. Although the model is developed within the Nelson and Winter tradition, the introduction of the ÔAustrianÕ issue of roundaboutness implies a major extension of the research agenda, including production-structure innovations, the emergence and functioning of markets for intermediate products, ways of coping with the instability of upstream markets, the spread of the effects of an upstream innovation, and the measurement of the degree of roundaboutness and of overall productivity. The model reflects a Schumpeterian version of the Bšhm-Bawerkian vision of the emergence of increased long-term roundaboutness of production. The Schumpeterian approach implies an innovation- and entrepreneur-driven process of vertical disintegration and reintegration.
Keywords: Roundaboutness, production graphs, evolutionary economic modelling, Nelson and Winter
JEL classification: L0, L1, B25
ISBN: 87-7873-013-9