Reference : Labor Market Effects of Technology Shocks biased Toward the Traded Sector
E-prints/Working papers : First made available on ORBilu
Business & economic sciences : Macroeconomics & monetary economics
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/48350
Labor Market Effects of Technology Shocks biased Toward the Traded Sector
English
Bertinelli, Luisito mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance (FDEF) > Department of Economics and Management (DEM) >]
Cardi []
Restout []
Oct-2021
No
[en] Sector-biased technology shocks ; Factor-augmenting effciency ; Open economy
[en] Motivated by recent evidence pointing at an increasing contribution of asymmetric shocks across sectors to economic fluctuations, we explore the labor market effects of technology shocks biased toward the traded sector. Our VAR evidence for seventeen OECD countries reveals that the non-traded sector alone drives the increase in total hours worked following a technology shock that increases permanently traded relative to non-traded TFP. The shock generates a reallocation of labor toward the non-traded sector which contributes to 35% on average of the rise in non-traded hours worked. Both labor reallocation and variations in labor income shares are found empirically connected with factor-biased technological change. Our quantitative analysis shows that a two-sector open economy model with flexible prices can reproduce the labor market effects we document empirically once we allow for imperfect mobility of labor, gross substitutability between home- and foreign-produced traded goods, and factor-biased technological change. When calibrating the model to country-specific data, its ability to account for the cross-country reallocation and redistributive effects we estimate increases once we let factor-biased technological change vary between sectors and across countries.
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/48350

File(s) associated to this reference

Fulltext file(s):

FileCommentaryVersionSizeAccess
Open access
DP2021-15 Labor Market Effects of Technology Shocks Biased Toward the Traded Sector.pdfAuthor preprint4.87 MBView/Open

Bookmark and Share SFX Query

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.