Authors
Guido Cozzi, Giammario Impullitti
Publication date
2016/12/1
Journal
Review of Economics and Statistics
Volume
98
Issue
5
Pages
984-1000
Publisher
The MIT Press
Description
In the 1980s and 1990s, the U.S. labor market experienced a remarkable polarization along with fast technological catch-up as Europe and Japan improved their global innovation performance. Is foreign technological convergence an important source of wage polarization? To answer this question, we build a multicountry Schumpeterian growth model with heterogeneous workers, endogenous skill formation, and occupational choice. We show that convergence produces polarization through business stealing and increasing competition in global innovation races. Quantitative analysis shows that these channels can be important sources of U.S. polarization. Moreover, the model delivers predictions on the U.S. wealth-income ratio consistent with empirical evidence.
Total citations
2016201720182019202020212022202331874591
Scholar articles
G Cozzi, G Impullitti - Review of Economics and Statistics, 2016