The Skill Premium, Technological Change and Appropriability |
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Authors: | Richard Nahuis Sjak Smulders |
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Affiliation: | (1) CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis and Nijmegen University, P.O. Box 80510, 2508 GM The Hague, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Economics and CentER, Tilburg University, P.O. Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | This paper demonstrates that an increase in the relative supply of educated workers generates a structural change in the production structure towards a knowledge-intensive production process. This structural shift may ultimately lead to an increase in the return to educated labor despite the increase in their supply. The paper argues that the steady increase in the supply of educated workers that most Western economies have experienced in recent decades may be viewed as the driving force behind the observed pattern of wage inequality. In particular, the paper demonstrates that if firms can appropriate a sufficient share of the intertemporal return from knowledge generating activities of their labor force, a gradual increase in the supply of skilled workers would generate only a temporary reduction in the skill premium followed by a permanent increase in the return to skill. |
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Keywords: | wage inequality growth technological change research productivity appropriability |
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