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Title: General Purpose Technology and Within-Group Inequality
Author(s): Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt and Giovanni L. Violante
Publication Date: June 2000
Keyword(s): General Purpose Technology, History-Dependence, Inequality, Skill Transferability and Technological Progress
Programme Area(s): International Macroeconomics and Labour Economics
Abstract: This paper develops a theoretical model to analyse how a General Purpose Technology (GPT) shapes within-group wage inequality when workers are ex-ante equal, but their adaptability to new technologies is subject to stochastic factors that are history dependent. It is argued that the diffusion of a GPT leverages the importance of these stochastic factors in three ways. First, a rise in the speed of embodied technological progress raises the market premium to workers adaptable to the leading-edge technology. Second, the generality of the technology raises the ability of adaptable workers to transfer recently acquired knowledge to new machines. Third, the generality of the technology reduces the cost of retooling old machines, which increases the demand for adaptable workers. In the model the rise in within-group inequality is mainly transitory, and is mirrored by a rise in wage instability. The key predictions of the model are shown to be in line with some of the existing empirical evidence.
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Bibliographic Reference
Aghion, P, Howitt, P and Violante, G. 2000. 'General Purpose Technology and Within-Group Inequality'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=2474