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The Engine of Growth: Creative Destruction
ECON002 Lesson 15
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Think of capitalism not as a static building, but as a wild, untamed forest. In this ecosystem, a 'fire' isn't just a disasterβ€”it’s the mechanism of renewal. Joseph Schumpeter called this Creative Destruction: the "essential fact about capitalism" where technological progress perpetually revolutionizes the economic structure from within, destroying the obsolete and birthing the revolutionary.

Living Standards Time (History) ~1000 to 1800 Post-1800 (Modern Era) THE CHURN Jobs Lost & Created Innovation Rents Malthusian Trap The Hockey Stick Rapid growth takeoff

The Fuel of Progress

Why do entrepreneurs embrace this chaos? The answer lies in Schumpeterian Innovation Rents. These are temporary profits earned by early adopters of a new technology. By producing at a lower cost than the 'old guard,' innovators gain a temporary monopoly until the technology diffuses across the economy.

  • The Productivity Complementarity: While specific sectors die, living standards rise because technological progress and capital accumulation complement each other, raising the average marginal product of labor.
  • Job Churn vs. Unemployment: Data in the hockey stick chart shows that while capitalism involves constant job destruction, it does not lead to higher long-run unemployment because it creates new demand and entirely new sectors.
Real-World Evolution
The transition from horse-and-buggy to the internal combustion engine destroyed blacksmithing but created millions of roles in automotive, oil, and logisticsβ€”massively increasing net employment and wealth.