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Skill-Biased Technological Change and the Real Exchange Rate
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- We sketch a model that shows how skill-biased technological change may reverse the classic Balassa-Samuelson effect, leading to a negative relationship between productivity in the tradable sector and the real exchange rate. In a small open economy, export goods are produced with high-skilled labor, in conjunction with capital and low-skilled labor, and are traded for imported consumption goods. Non-tradable services are produced with low-skilled labor only. A rise in the productivity of capital has two effects: (1) It may reduce the demand for labor in the tradable sector if the substitutability of low-skilled labor and capital in the tradable sector is high; and (2) it increases the demand for non-tradables and associated labor input. Overall demand for low-skilled labor declines if the labor force of the tradable sector is large relative to the labor force of the non-tradable sector. This leads to lower wages and thus to lower prices and real exchange rate depreciation.
- Subjects :
- Kleine offene Volkswirtschaft
F16
J24
jel:F31
Allgemeines Gleichgewicht
jel:F41
jel:J24
Kaufkraftparität
Humankapital
jel:F16
Real Exchange Rate, Balassa-Samuelson Hypothesis, Skill-biased Technological Change, General Equilibrium
Balassa-Samuelson Hypothesis
Skill-biased Technological Change
ddc:330
Technischer Fortschritt
F41
Real Exchange Rate
Mehrsektoren-Modell
Theorie
F31
General Equilibrium
Balassa-Samuelson-Effekt
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2b23c4f410772306b5b6e8d123769118