TY - JOUR
T1 - Technological acceleration, skill transferability, and the rise in residual inequality
AU - Violante, Giovanni L.
PY - 2002/2
Y1 - 2002/2
N2 - This paper provides a quantitative theory for the recent rise in residual wage inequality consistent with the empirical observation that a sizable part of this increase has a transitory nature, a feature that eludes standard models based on ex ante heterogeneity in ability. An acceleration in the rate of quality improvement of equipment, like the one observed from the early 1970s, increases the productivity/quality differentials across machines (jobs). In a frictional labor market, this force translates into higher wage dispersion even among ex ante equal workers. With vintage-human capital, the acceleration reduces workers' capacity to transfer skills from old to new machines, generating a rise in the cross-sectional variance of skills, and therefore of wages. Through calibration, the paper shows that this mechanism can account for 30 percent of the surge in residual inequality in the U. S. economy (or for most of its transitory component). Two key implications of the theory-faster within-job wage growth and larger wage losses upon displacement-find empirical support in the data.
AB - This paper provides a quantitative theory for the recent rise in residual wage inequality consistent with the empirical observation that a sizable part of this increase has a transitory nature, a feature that eludes standard models based on ex ante heterogeneity in ability. An acceleration in the rate of quality improvement of equipment, like the one observed from the early 1970s, increases the productivity/quality differentials across machines (jobs). In a frictional labor market, this force translates into higher wage dispersion even among ex ante equal workers. With vintage-human capital, the acceleration reduces workers' capacity to transfer skills from old to new machines, generating a rise in the cross-sectional variance of skills, and therefore of wages. Through calibration, the paper shows that this mechanism can account for 30 percent of the surge in residual inequality in the U. S. economy (or for most of its transitory component). Two key implications of the theory-faster within-job wage growth and larger wage losses upon displacement-find empirical support in the data.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036487694&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=0036487694&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1162/003355302753399517
DO - 10.1162/003355302753399517
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:0036487694
SN - 0033-5533
VL - 117
SP - 297
EP - 338
JO - Quarterly Journal of Economics
JF - Quarterly Journal of Economics
IS - 1
ER -