Author
Way, R
Lafond, F
Lillo, F
Panchenko, V
Farmer, J
Journal title
Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control
DOI
10.1016/j.jedc.2018.10.006
Volume
101
Last updated
2024-04-11T09:47:43.363+01:00
Page
211-238
Abstract
We consider how to optimally allocate investments in a portfolio of competing technologies using the standard mean-variance framework of portfolio theory. We assume that technologies follow the empirically observed relationship known as Wright’s law, also called a “learning curve” or “experience curve”, which postulates that costs drop as cumulative production increases. This introduces a positive feedback between cost and investment that complicates the portfolio problem, leading to multiple local optima, and causing a trade-off between concentrating investments in one project to spur rapid progress vs. diversifying over many projects to hedge against failure. We study the two-technology case and characterize the optimal diversification in terms of progress rates, variability, initial costs, initial experience, risk aversion, discount rate and total demand. The efficient frontier framework is used to visualize technology portfolios and show how feedback results in nonlinear distortions of the feasible set. For the two-period case, in which learning and uncertainty interact with discounting, we compare different scenarios and find that the discount rate plays a critical role.
Symplectic ID
896795
Favourite
Off
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
31 Jan 2019
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 08 Aug 2018 - 13:16.