The World Technology Frontier
London School of Economics and Political Science · Duke University
Abstract
We study cross-country differences in the aggregate production function when skilled and unskilled labor are imperfect substitutes. We find that there is a skill bias in cross-country technology differences. Higher-income countries use skilled labor more efficiently than lower-income countries, while they use unskilled labor relatively and, possibly, absolutely less efficiently. We also propose a simple explanation for our findings: rich countries, which are skilled-labor abundant, choose technologies that are best suited to skilled workers; poor countries, which are unskilled-labor abundant, choose technologies more appropriate to unskilled workers. We discuss alternative explanations, such as capital-skill…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 127.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 79
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Complementarity (molecular biology)
- Economics
- Frontier
- Labour economics
- Human capital
- Imperfect
- Production function
- Production (economics)
- No poverty