TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION, TURBULENCE, AND THE DYNAMICS OF UNEMPLOYMENT
Author(s) -
Duernecker Georg
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the european economic association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.792
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1542-4774
pISSN - 1542-4766
DOI - 10.1111/jeea.12041
Subject(s) - unemployment , economics , frontier , labour economics , capital (architecture) , stock (firearms) , unemployment rate , work (physics) , capital deepening , financial capital , macroeconomics , capital formation , human capital , economic growth , political science , mechanical engineering , history , archaeology , law , engineering
Starting in the late 1970s, European unemployment began to increase while US unemployment remained constant. At the same time, capital‐embodied technical change began to accelerate, and the United States adopted the new capital much faster than Europe. I argue that these two facts are related. The main idea is that if there is capital‐embodied technical change, then the unemployment rate depends critically on how obsolete the installed capital stock is compared to the frontier. In particular, European workers initially worked with relatively obsolete capital, and so they lacked the skills required to work with frontier capital. When they lost their jobs they therefore stayed unemployed for longer than their American counterparts. I find that this channel accounts for about 70% of the discrepancy between the behavior of unemployment rates in Europe and the United States.
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