Quantitative Economics

Journal Of The Econometric Society

Edited by: Stéphane Bonhomme • Print ISSN: 1759-7323 • Online ISSN: 1759-7331

Quantitative Economics: May, 2020, Volume 11, Issue 2

The price of polarization: Estimating task prices under routine‐biased technical change

Michael J. Böhm

This paper proposes a new approach to estimate task prices per efficiency unit of skill in the Roy model. I show how the sorting of workers into tasks and their associated wage growth can be used to identify changes in task prices under relatively weak assumptions. The estimation exploits the fact that the returns to observable talents will change differentially over time depending on the changes in prices of those tasks that they predict workers to sort into. In the generalized Roy model, also the average non‐pecuniary amenities in each task are identified. I apply this approach to the literature on routine‐biased technical change, a key prediction of which is that task prices should polarize. Empirical results for male workers in U.S. data indicate that abstract and manual tasks' relative prices indeed increased during the 1990s and 2000s.

Task prices Roy model routine‐biased technical change polarization wage distribution J23 J24 J31

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Supplement to "The price of polarization: Estimating task prices under routine‐biased technical change"

Supplement to "The price of polarization: Estimating task prices under routine‐biased technical change"

Supplement to "The price of polarization: Estimating task prices under routine‐biased technical change"

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