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Techies, Trade and Skill-Biased Productivity

Harrigan, J.; Reshef, A.; Toubal, Farid (2021), Techies, Trade and Skill-Biased Productivity. https://basepub.dauphine.psl.eu/handle/123456789/22146

Type
Document de travail / Working paper
External document link
https://www.nber.org/papers/w25295
Date
2021
Series title
NBER Working Papers
Series number
25295
Published in
Washington
Pages
70
Metadata
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Author(s)
Harrigan, J.
Reshef, A.
Toubal, Farid
Abstract (EN)
We study the impact of firm level choices of ICT, R&D, exporting and importing on the evolution of productivity, its bias towards skilled workers, and the implications for labor demand. We use a novel measure of firm-level technology: firms' employment of workers in occupations related to R&D and ICT adoption, who we call “techies”. We develop a methodology for estimating nested CES production functions at the firm level, which allows us to measure both Hicks-neutral and skill-augmenting technology differences. Using administrative data on French firms we find that techies, exporting and importing raise skill-biased productivity. In contrast, only ICT techies raise Hicks-neutral productivity. On average, higher firm-level skill biased productivity does not affect low-skill employment even as it raises the ratio of skilled to unskilled workers, due to the cost-reducing effect of higher productivity. ICT techies account for large increases in aggregate demand for skill, mostly due to their effect on firm size, less so through within-firm changes. Exporting, importing, and R&D techies have smaller aggregate effects.
Subjects / Keywords
D24,F16,F60,F66,J23,J24,O52; Productivity; Skill Bias; Skill Augmenting; Labor Demand; Outsourcing; Globalization; R&D; ICT; Techies
JEL
O52 - Europe
D24 - Production; Cost; Capital; Capital, Total Factor, and Multifactor Productivity; Capacity
J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
J23 - Labor Demand
F66 - Labor
F60 - General
F16 - Trade and Labor Market Interactions

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