scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

The Bias of Technological Change in Europe

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, a comprehensive assessment of the factor bias of technological change using panel data from the World Input-Output Database (WIOD) for 25 EU countries from 1995 to 2009 is provided.
Abstract
This paper is concerned with measuring and influencing the direction of technological change. First, it provides a comprehensive assessment of the factor bias of technological change using panel data from the World Input-Output Database (WIOD) for 25 EU countries from 1995 to 2009. We measure the bias with respect to the inputs capital, energy, non-energy materials and three types of labour (low-, medium- and high-skilled). For this purpose, the factor cost share approach based on the duality of production theory is applied. Estimating the system of cost share equations derived from a translog cost function, we find that technological change was low- and medium-skilled labour-saving, high-skilled labour-using, and energy- and materials-using. Second, the paper addresses the question how technological change could be redirected towards saving more energy and less labour. Patent applications in energy- and labour-saving technology fields are used to model the direction of technological change. We construct stocks of patents in these fields and integrate them into the system of cost share equations as proxies for the level of technology. Upon finding that they were indeed energy and labour saving over our sample period, we regress them on policy variables to identify instruments for shifting the bias away from saving labour towards saving energy. We conclude that one way to achieve this, at least partly, would be an increase in the energy tax rate coupled with a matching reduction in the social security contributions paid by employers for low-skilled workers.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy-biased technical change in the Chinese industrial sector with CES production functions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theoretical framework to study energy-biased technical change considering capital, labor and energy as inputs, and found that technical change is unambiguously energy biased, it increases in every year, and the bias is predominately away from labor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy biased technology change: Focused on Chinese energy-intensive industries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a framework to estimate technical change bias for three input factors, i.e., elasticity and technical change parameters for a constant elasticity of substitution function with capital, labour and energy, derived from the elasticities and marginal output.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preventing Technological Unemployment by Widening our Understanding of Capital and Progress : Making Robots Work for Us *

TL;DR: The authors argue that unless we direct technology, technology will increasingly direct us, with mass un(der)employment and a possible atrophying of the human soul (i.e. human thinking, feeling and will) as likely conseq...
Journal ArticleDOI

Robots and us : towards an economics of the ‘Good Life’

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the possible conflict between the quest for "inclusive and sustainable society" and conventional economic principles guiding capital allocation (including the funding of research and innovation), and propose that such conflict can be resolved by re-examining the nature and purpose of capital, and by recognising mainstream economics' utilitarian foundations as an unduly restrictive subset of a wider Aristotelian understanding of choice.
Posted Content

Moving towards a new growth model: Policy options

TL;DR: The second WWWforEurope Feedback Conference as mentioned in this paper was dedicated to collecting impulses for the project's synthesis report, which represents the main output at the end of the project, with a particular focus on laying the analytical basis for a socio-ecological transition.
References
More filters
Book

Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data

TL;DR: This is the essential companion to Jeffrey Wooldridge's widely-used graduate text Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data (MIT Press, 2001).
ReportDOI

Endogenous Technological Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the stock of human capital determines the rate of growth, that too little human capital is devoted to research in equilibrium, that integration into world markets will increase growth rates, and that having a large population is not sufficient to generate growth.
Posted Content

Endogenous Technological Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the stock of human capital determines the rate of growth, that too little human capital is devoted to research in equilibrium, that integration into world markets will increase growth rates, and that having a large population is not sufficient to generate growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical change and the aggregate production function

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method to improve the performance of the system by using the information of the user's interaction with the system and the system itself, including the interaction between the two parties.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Efficient Method of Estimating Seemingly Unrelated Regressions and Tests for Aggregation Bias

TL;DR: In this paper, a method of estimating the parameters of a set of regression equations is reported which involves application of Aitken's generalized least-squares to the whole system of equations.
Related Papers (5)