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Marriott Marquis, San Diego Ballroom B
Hosted By:
American Economic Association
The Race between Education and Technology Revisited
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 4, 2020 2:30 PM - 4:30 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Lawrence Katz, Harvard University
COLLEGE ATTAINMENT, INCOME INEQUALITY, AND ECONOMIC SECURITY: A SIMULATION EXERCISE
Abstract
We simulate the effect that increasing rates of educational attainment -- focusing on associate and bachelor’s degree completion - would have on various measures of U.S. economic security and income inequality. The simulation uses parameter estimates of educational attainment impacts from existing studies and applies them to population data.Automation, New Tasks, and Inequality
Abstract
Automation, which substitutes capital for labor in tasks previously performed by humans, can increase the demand for skills because the workers specializing in at-risk tasks tend to be lower skill. The creation of new tasks in which humans have a competitive advantage tends to counterbalance the effects of automation by reinstating labor into new activities, but to the extent that more skilled workers are the ones performing new tasks, this may also contribute to a greater demand for skills and higher inequality. We establish that both automation and new task indeed contribute to higher demand for skills. We follow the methodology of Acemoglu and Restrepo (2019) to infer measures of displacement caused by automation and reinstatement generated by new tasks at the industry level and then show that both of these are positively correlated with the wage bill of more skilled workers in these industries. We then discuss what types of technological and organizational changes may help keep the demand for skills and inequality in check.Structural Increases in Skill Demand after the Great Recession
Abstract
This paper shows that employer demand for education increased markedly during the Great Recession, and has remained persistently higher through 2019. We find the largest increase in education requirements in professional, managerial and technical occupations, and in high-wage cities.Discussant(s)
John Michael Van Reenen
,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sandra E. Black
,
Columbia University
Chad Jones
,
Stanford University
Nicole Fortin
,
University of British Columbia
JEL Classifications
- J3 - Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs