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Product Demand Shifts and Wage Inequality

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dc.creator Leonardi, Marco
dc.date 2003
dc.date.accessioned 2013-10-16T07:08:57Z
dc.date.available 2013-10-16T07:08:57Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-16
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10419/20145
dc.identifier ppn:372806856
dc.identifier.uri http://koha.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10419/20145
dc.description The UK and the US have experienced both rising skill premia and rising employment of skilled workers since the 1980s. These trends are typically interpreted as concurrent shifts of relative skill supplies and demands, and the demand shifts are attributed to skill-biased technological change or changes in international trade patterns. If more skilled workers demand more skill-intensive goods, then an exogenous increase in relative skill supplies will also induce a shift in relative demand. This channel reduces the need to rely on technology and trade to explain the patterns in the data. I illustrate this mechanism with a simple twosector general equilibrium model. The empirical part demonstrates that in the UK more educated and richer workers demand more skill-intensive goods. Calibration of the model suggests that this induced demand shift can explain 3% of the total relative demand shift in the UK between 1981 and 1997. The baseline model only explains between-industry shifts in skill upgrading and wage inequality, while empirically, most of these changes took place within industries. An extension of the model with different qualities of goods and labor can also explain some of the within-industry changes.
dc.language eng
dc.publisher
dc.relation IZA Discussion paper series 908
dc.rights http://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen
dc.subject J31
dc.subject J21
dc.subject ddc:330
dc.subject wage inequality
dc.subject demand shifts
dc.subject income elasticity
dc.subject Lohnstruktur
dc.subject Qualifikation
dc.subject Hochqualifizierte Arbeitskräfte
dc.subject Gesamtwirtschaftliche Nachfrage
dc.subject Produktqualität
dc.subject Einkommenselastizität
dc.subject Mehr-Sektoren-Modell
dc.subject Theorie
dc.subject Großbritannien
dc.title Product Demand Shifts and Wage Inequality
dc.type doc-type:workingPaper


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