Routine-Biased Technical Change, Structure of Employment, and Cross-Country Income Differences

Research Seminars: Mannheim Applied Seminar

In the first part of this paper presented in this ZEW Research Seminar the authors investigate links between routine-biased technical change, the structure of oc-cupational employment, and cross-country income differences. To implement this, they combine several data sources including national labour force surveys and Penn World Tables. The authors first document that in their novel dataset spanning 92 countries there is a negative relationship between the employment share of routine occupations and GDP per hour worked. They then conduct a development accounting exercise where they differentiate labour inputs by occupation and allow for occupation-specific technologies. They find that there is a systematic relationship between occupation-specific technologies and GDP per hour worked. More developed economies use technologies that are more routine-biased. The productivity of routine labour is about 11 times higher in the top 25 percent than in the bottom 25 percent of countries ranked by GDP per hour worked. International differences in this routine labour technology by themselves account for about 13 percent of the 90-10 ratio of GDP per hour worked, whereas differences in abstract labour technology do not contribute to the observed GDP dispersion. Eliminating all oc-cupations’ and capital’s technology differences across the world would compress the GDP distribution by 35 to 41 percent.

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ZEW – Leibniz-Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung

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L 7, 1, 68161 Mannheim
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