Since the 1980s, the labour demand has shifted toward more educated workers in the US. The most common explanation is that the productivity of skilled workers has risen relative to the unskilled, but it is not easy to explain why the aggregate labour productivity was stagnant during the 1980s. Alternatively, I have constructed a theoretical model which assumes that the demand for white-collar workers increases not because their productivity grows faster, but because increasing product variety requires white-collar workers as fixed input. Hence, the transition from Ford-style mass production towards more diversified one has shifted labour demand toward white-collar workers
Skill intensive technologies seem to be adopted by rich countries rather than poor ones. Related to ...
Skill-biased technical change is usually interpreted in terms of the efficiency parameters of skille...
Wages ; Human capital ; Technology ; Income distribution ; Labor market ; Regression analysis
Since the 1980s, the labour demand has shifted toward more educated workers in the US. The most comm...
Since the 1980s, labour demand has shifted toward more educated workers in the US. The most common e...
Most of the literature on skill-biased technological change views both skilled and unskilled labour ...
The UK and the US have experienced both rising skill premia and rising employment of skilled workers...
Demand for less skilled workers decreased dramatically in the US and in other developed countries ov...
The labour market position of low skilled workers has deteriorated dramatically over the 80s and ear...
Demand for less skilled workers decreased dramatically in the US and in other developed countries ov...
Since the late 1970s and continuing through the mid-2000s, overall wage inequality has been increasi...
The paper investigates the shift in demand towards more skilled labour in Swedish manufacturing duri...
Do industries shed jobs when they adopt new labor-saving technologies? Sometimes productivity-enhanc...
International audienceThis article contributes to the debate on skill-biased technical change by stu...
Demand for less-skilled workers plummeted in developed countries in the 1980s. In open economies, pe...
Skill intensive technologies seem to be adopted by rich countries rather than poor ones. Related to ...
Skill-biased technical change is usually interpreted in terms of the efficiency parameters of skille...
Wages ; Human capital ; Technology ; Income distribution ; Labor market ; Regression analysis
Since the 1980s, the labour demand has shifted toward more educated workers in the US. The most comm...
Since the 1980s, labour demand has shifted toward more educated workers in the US. The most common e...
Most of the literature on skill-biased technological change views both skilled and unskilled labour ...
The UK and the US have experienced both rising skill premia and rising employment of skilled workers...
Demand for less skilled workers decreased dramatically in the US and in other developed countries ov...
The labour market position of low skilled workers has deteriorated dramatically over the 80s and ear...
Demand for less skilled workers decreased dramatically in the US and in other developed countries ov...
Since the late 1970s and continuing through the mid-2000s, overall wage inequality has been increasi...
The paper investigates the shift in demand towards more skilled labour in Swedish manufacturing duri...
Do industries shed jobs when they adopt new labor-saving technologies? Sometimes productivity-enhanc...
International audienceThis article contributes to the debate on skill-biased technical change by stu...
Demand for less-skilled workers plummeted in developed countries in the 1980s. In open economies, pe...
Skill intensive technologies seem to be adopted by rich countries rather than poor ones. Related to ...
Skill-biased technical change is usually interpreted in terms of the efficiency parameters of skille...
Wages ; Human capital ; Technology ; Income distribution ; Labor market ; Regression analysis