This study investigates whether capital-skill complementarity is the explanation for skill-biased technical change. For this to be the case, capital-skill complementarity must exist in the first place and, secondly, all technical change must be embodied in nature, i.e. embedded in new capital equipment. To test if these conditions are satisfied, a capital-age adjusted translog production function incorporating both embodied and disembodied technical change is implemented on a 14-industry panel for Swedish manufacturing 1985-95. The findings cast doubt on the claim that capital-skill complementarity can explain skill-biased technical change. In several industries, the capital-skill complementarity hypothesis is not supported. Moreover, it is...
nvestigating the robustness of the skill-biased technological change hypothesis, this analysis incor...
While intermediate inputs account for more than half of a final product’s value, intersectoral linka...
Skill-Biased Technical Change is a shift in the production technology that favors skilled over unski...
This study investigates whether capital-skill complementarity is the explanation for skill-biased te...
It is generally agreed that skill-biased technological change (SBTC) and capital-skill complementari...
The goal of this paper is two-fold. First, we reexamine the evidence for the capital-skill complemen...
We estimate the extent of factor bias in technical changes consistent with observed changes in skill...
We estimate the extent of factor bias in technical changes consistent with observed changes in skill...
This Version: 20.03.02 Capital-skill complementarity (CSC) has often been cited as an explanation of...
This paper attempts to examine technology’s impact on the labor market through the lens of skilled l...
Since Griliches (1969), researchers have been intrigued by the idea that physical capital and skille...
Note: This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the European Central Ba...
We build an intertemporal general equilibrium framework with a double heterogeneity: simple vs. comp...
Current concern with the impact of new technologies on the wage structure motivates this study. We o...
In most OECD-countries, labour demand has shifted from unskilled to skilled over time. Many analyses...
nvestigating the robustness of the skill-biased technological change hypothesis, this analysis incor...
While intermediate inputs account for more than half of a final product’s value, intersectoral linka...
Skill-Biased Technical Change is a shift in the production technology that favors skilled over unski...
This study investigates whether capital-skill complementarity is the explanation for skill-biased te...
It is generally agreed that skill-biased technological change (SBTC) and capital-skill complementari...
The goal of this paper is two-fold. First, we reexamine the evidence for the capital-skill complemen...
We estimate the extent of factor bias in technical changes consistent with observed changes in skill...
We estimate the extent of factor bias in technical changes consistent with observed changes in skill...
This Version: 20.03.02 Capital-skill complementarity (CSC) has often been cited as an explanation of...
This paper attempts to examine technology’s impact on the labor market through the lens of skilled l...
Since Griliches (1969), researchers have been intrigued by the idea that physical capital and skille...
Note: This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the European Central Ba...
We build an intertemporal general equilibrium framework with a double heterogeneity: simple vs. comp...
Current concern with the impact of new technologies on the wage structure motivates this study. We o...
In most OECD-countries, labour demand has shifted from unskilled to skilled over time. Many analyses...
nvestigating the robustness of the skill-biased technological change hypothesis, this analysis incor...
While intermediate inputs account for more than half of a final product’s value, intersectoral linka...
Skill-Biased Technical Change is a shift in the production technology that favors skilled over unski...