Varun

62%
Flag icon
In 1990 a young economist named Paul Romer took an interest in the problem of increasing returns and the growth of knowledge. Romer devised an answer that would eventually win him the Nobel Prize. He tried to make innovation as the source of economic growth an ‘endogenous’ factor in models. To put it another way he made innovation into a product, something that is an output as well as an input of economic activity.
How Innovation Works: And Why It Flourishes in Freedom
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview