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Technological change and wage premiums: historical evidence from linked employer–employee data

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Article
H

Hynninen, Sanna-Mari ; Ojala, Jari ; Pehkonen, Jaakko

Labour Economics

2013

24

Oct.

1-11

level of qualification ; skill ; technological change ; wage incentive

Sweden

Wages and wage payment systems

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.labeco.2013.05.006

English

Bibliogr.

"This study analyses the impacts of a technological change (the steam engine) on wage premiums. Using historical employer–employee panel data, we found that steam technology had both new skill-demanding and skill-replacing aspects. The former manifested itself as an increase in the demand for high-skilled engineers, the latter in a decline in the demand for intermediate-skilled, able-bodied seamen and an increase in the demand for unskilled engine room operators. Our panel data analysis, which controls for unobserved heterogeneity, implies that high-skilled labourers in abstract tasks and unskilled labourers in manual tasks improved their wage positions relative to intermediate-skilled labourers in routine tasks. These findings are compatible with the hypothesis of technology-based polarisation."

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