نتایج جستجو برای: طبقهبندی jel o33

تعداد نتایج: 27694  

1999
FRANCESCO CASELLI Alberto Alesina Gadi Barlevy Robert Barro Eli Berman Steve Davis Sven Feldmann Oded Galor Zvi Griliches Larry Katz Peter Klenow David Laibson John Leahy

In skill-biased (de-skilling) technological revolutions learning investments required by new machines are greater (smaller) than those required by preexisting machines. Skill-biased (de-skilling) revolutions trigger reallocations of capital from slow(fast-) to fast(slow-) learning workers, thereby reducing the relative and absolute wages of the former. The model of skill-biased (de-skilling) re...

2013
Lisa J. Dettling

This paper investigates how high-speed home Internet has impacted married women’s labor force participation. I estimate the net effect of individual Internet usage on labor supply using an instrumental variables strategy which exploits cross-state variation in supply-side constraints to residential broadband Internet access. Results indicate that married women who use the Internet are more like...

2011
Luis Angeles Martin A. Klein

This papers analyses the causes behind Africa’s unfortunate transformation into the source of the world’s slaves over the early modern period. We discuss the economic and technological forces leading to it, and address questions such as why were most slave buyers Europeans and most slave sellers Africans. We then relate the discussion to the long-term determinants of African underdevelopment, a...

2011
Dan Fetter John Lyons Bob Margo Mike Meurer Petra Moser Heidi Williams Dara Lee

Did nineteenth century technology reduce demand for skilled workers in contrast to modern technology? I obtain direct evidence on human capital investments and the returns to skill by using micro-data on individual weavers and an engineering production function. Weavers learned substantially on the job. While mechanization eliminated some tasks and the associated skills, it increased returns to...

2011
Gernot Sieg Antje-Mareike Dietrich

This article shows that in the presence of environmental externalities, it may be welfare enhancing to overcome a technological lock-in by a deadend technology through governmental intervention. It is socially desirable to subsidize a dead-end technology if its environmental externality is small relative to the one of the established technology, if the installed base and/or the strength of the ...

2009
Kiyoshi Matsubara

This paper extends Symeonidis (2003)’s duopoly model with product differentiation to discusses how FDI spillovers that decreases the quality difference between vertically differentiated products of the home and foreign firms affects the home firm’s decision on plant location. This paper shows that whether the degree of spillover is exogenous or endogenous, it may have a positive relationship wi...

2014
Daron Acemoglu

This paper revisits the important ideas proposed by Atkinson and Stiglitz’s seminal 1969 paper on technological change. After linking these ideas to the induced innovation literature of the 1960s and the more recent directed technological change literature, it explains how these three complementary but different approaches are useful in the study of a range of current research areas– though the...

2013
Ana Rincon Michela Vecchi Francesco Venturini

We analyse the impact of ICT spillovers on productivity using company data for the U.S. We account for interand intra-industry spillovers and assess the role played by firm’s absorptive capacity. Our results show that intra-industry ICT spillovers have a contemporaneous negative effect that turns positive 5 years after the initial investment. For inter-industry spillovers both contemporaneous a...

2005
Gino Gancia Fabrizio Zilibotti Jeremy Greenwood Kiminori Matsuyama

We analyze recent contributions to growth theory based on the model of expanding variety of Romer (1990). In the first part, we present different versions of the benchmark linear model with imperfect competition. These include the “labequipment” model, “labor-for-intermediates” and “directed technical change”. We review applications of the expanding variety framework to the analysis of internat...

2016
Sunita Desai

Rates of electronic information sharing and interoperability among hospitals remain low despite government investments exceeding $30 billion. Using a network economics framework, I show that low rates are driven by two factors. First, hospitals with weak market power avoid interoperability to keep patients from going elsewhere for care. Second, even if hospitals value interoperability, heteroge...

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