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KapitalstockzuArbeitskraftVerhältnis

Kapitalstockzuwachs, or capital stock growth, refers to the change in the total stock of physical capital—such as factories, machinery, roads, and buildings—in an economy over a given period. It results from gross investment adding to the existing capital stock, offset by depreciation and obsolescence. The concept is central to understanding changes in an economy’s productive capacity and potential output.

In macroeconomic terms, the capital stock is often denoted by K, and its evolution can be expressed

Determinants of capital stock growth include saving behavior and investment, the rate at which capital depreciates,

Measurement of capital stock faces challenges, including varying depreciation schedules, asset quality, and data quality. Statistical

in
a
perpetual
inventory
framework.
A
common
discrete-time
formulation
is
K_{t+1}
=
(1
−
δ)K_t
+
I_t,
where
δ
is
the
depreciation
rate
and
I_t
is
gross
investment.
Net
investment
equals
I_t
−
δK_t.
If
net
investment
is
positive,
the
capital
stock
grows;
if
negative,
it
declines.
Investment
decisions,
depreciation,
and
asset
quality
all
influence
the
path
of
K.
and
the
pace
of
technological
progress
that
affects
the
productivity
of
capital
services.
In
growth
models
such
as
the
Solow
framework,
population
growth
and
the
saving
rate
determine
the
steady-state
level
of
capital
per
worker
and
long-run
output.
Capital
stock
growth
can
drive
higher
potential
output
and
labor
productivity,
especially
when
investment
increases
capital
per
worker
(capital
deepening).
agencies
often
use
the
perpetual
inventory
method,
combining
investment
data
with
assumed
depreciation
to
estimate
the
capital
stock
over
time.
Limitations
of
the
concept
include
its
abstraction
from
distributional
effects
and
the
efficiency
with
which
capital
is
mobilized,
which
also
shape
the
real
impact
of
capital
stock
growth.