Is Automation Labor Share-Displacing? Productivity Growth, Employment, and the Labor Share
Many technological innovations replace workers with machines. But this capital–labor substitution need not reduce aggregate labor demand, because it simultaneously induces four countervail-ing responses: own-industry output effects; cross-industry input–output effects; between-industry shifts; and f...
Main Authors: | Autor, David H, Salomons, Anna |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Brookings Institution Press
2020
|
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/124228 |
Similar Items
-
Concentrating on the Fall of the Labor Share
by: Dorn, David, et al.
Published: (2018) -
Unemployment and the labor share
by: Mangin, S, et al.
Published: (2017) -
Labor risk sharing
by: Manuelli, Lucas
Published: (2016) -
Financialization and the Labor Share of Income
by: Özdemir Onur
Published: (2019-12-01) -
The labor income Shares, the Price Markup, and the Elasticity of Substitution Between Capital and Labor
by: Mohammadnabi Shahikitash, et al.
Published: (2017-09-01)