Research Article Open Access

Product Quality and Effective Demand under Stagnation

Wataru Johdo

Abstract

Problem statement: Recent neoclassical theoretical study, particularly in the endogenous growth literature, has studied the nature of the relationship between economic growth and product quality. However, little attention has been given to the impact of a rise in product quality on effective demand under stagnation. This is because previous models have assumed that demand is always met with supply in labor and products markets. Therefore, the question remains as to whether a rise in product quality increases effective demand when stagnation occurs. Approach: This study applied an idea of stagnation and combined it with a quality ladder model to account for the relationship between product quality and effective demand under stagnation. Using this extended framework, this study examined the impact on effective demand of an R and D subsidy that improved product quality when stagnation occurs. Results: The results indicated that a rise in product quality increased the efficiency of consumption utility function and thereby enabled people to enjoy higher utility while consuming the same amount. However, under stagnation, people chose not to increase their utility, causing realized consumption to decrease and saving to increase. Consequently, effective demand decreased and the stagnation worsened. Conclusion: From the results, it can be concluded that use of R and D subsidies that improves product quality is not appropriate for a country where stagnation occurs.

American Journal of Applied Sciences
Volume 6 No. 7, 2009, 1277-1283

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2009.1277.1283

Submitted On: 16 February 2006 Published On: 31 July 2009

How to Cite: Johdo, W. (2009). Product Quality and Effective Demand under Stagnation. American Journal of Applied Sciences, 6(7), 1277-1283. https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2009.1277.1283

  • 3,302 Views
  • 2,580 Downloads
  • 6 Citations

Download

Keywords

  • Stagnation
  • quality ladder
  • effective demand
  • R and D subsidy