A Quantitative Study of the Replacement Problem in Frictional Economies
Giovanni Violante,
Andreas Hornstein and
Per Krusell
No 64, 2004 Meeting Papers from Society for Economic Dynamics
Abstract:
The question of how technological change affects labor markets is a classical one in macroeconomics. A standard framework for addressing this question is the matching model with vintage capital and exogenous technical progress. Within this framework, it has been argued that the impact of technological change on labor market outcomes differs according to the mechanism through which the new technology enters the economy. In particular, it matters whether: (1) new capital replaces old capital by destroying the job and displacing the worker (Schumpeterian creative-destruction) or old capital can be "upgraded" to the frontier technology (Solowian upgrading); (2) firms make the technology adoption decision unilaterally (hold-up), or the investment decision is surplus-maximizing (efficient investment). Our main finding is that for quantitatively reasonable parameter values the specific details of the model for how technology is introduced and who decides on investments do not matter for the equilibrium outcomes of our main variables of interest: unemployment, wage inequality, and labor share. The intuition for this "equivalence result" is that these models will yield significantly different implications only if the matching process is very costly and time-consuming, but our calibration shows that this meeting friction is minor
Keywords: investment-specific technical change; directed technical change; skill premium (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: J41 J64 O33 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2004
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge
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