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Extending the Race between Education and Technology

Author(s)
Autor, David H
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Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
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Abstract
The race between education and technology provides a canonical framework that does a remarkable job of explaining US wage structure changes across the twentieth century. The framework involves secular increases in the demand for more-educated workers from skill-biased technological change, combined with variations in the supply of skills from changes in educational access. We expand the analysis backward and forward. The framework helps explain rising skill differentials in the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries but needs to be augmented to illuminate the recent convexification of education returns and implied slowdown in the growth of the relative demand for college workers.
Date issued
2020-05
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130271
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
Journal
American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Autor, David et al. “Extending the Race between Education and Technology.” American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings, 110 (May 2020): 347-351 © 2020 The Author(s)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2574-0776

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