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Unraveling wage inequality: tangible and intangible assets, globalization and labor market regulations
[journal article]
Abstract In this paper, we study the asymmetric effects of different types of capital-embodied technological change, as proxied by tangible and intangible assets, on relative wages (high- to medium-skilled, high- to low-skilled and medium- to low-skilled workers), relying upon the technology-skill complement... view more
In this paper, we study the asymmetric effects of different types of capital-embodied technological change, as proxied by tangible and intangible assets, on relative wages (high- to medium-skilled, high- to low-skilled and medium- to low-skilled workers), relying upon the technology-skill complementarity and polarization of the labor force frameworks. We also consider two additional major channels that contribute to shaping wage differentials: globalization (in terms of trade openness and global value chains participation) and labor market institutions. The empirical analysis is carried out using a panel dataset comprising 17 mostly advanced European economies and 5 industries, with annual observations spanning the period 2008-2017. Our findings suggest that software and databases - as a proxy for intangible technologies - exert downward pressure on low-skilled wages, while robotics is associated with a polarization of the wage distribution at the expense of middle-skilled labor. Additionally, less-skilled workers' relative wages are negatively affected by trade openness and global value chain participation, but positively influenced by sector-specific labor market regulations.... view less
Keywords
technological change; automation; globalization; labor market; wage difference; income effect; qualification; international comparison
Classification
Labor Market Research
Free Keywords
Robots; Intangibles; Institutions; Wage differentials; EU-LFS 2020
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 1375-1420
Journal
Empirical Economics, 67 (2024)
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-024-02587-y
ISSN
1435-8921
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed