IT and Urban Polarization

J. Eeckhout, C. Hedtrich, Roberto B. Pinheiro
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

We show that differential IT investment across cities has been a key driver of job and wage polarization since the 1980s. Using a novel data set, we establish two stylized facts: IT investment is highest in firms in large and expensive cities, and the decline in routine cognitive occupations is most prevalent in large and expensive cities. To explain these facts, we propose a model mechanism where the substitution of routine workers by IT leads to higher IT adoption in large cities due to a higher cost of living and higher wages. We estimate the spatial equilibrium model to trace out the effects of IT on the labor market between 1990 and 2015. We find that the fall in IT prices explains 50 percent of the rising wage gap between routine and non-routine cognitive jobs. The decline in IT prices also accounts for 28 percent of the shift in employment away from routine cognitive towards non-routine cognitive jobs. Moreover, our estimates show that the impact of IT is uneven across space. Expensive locations have seen a stronger displacement of routine cognitive jobs and a larger widening of the wage gap between routine and non-routine cognitive jobs.
信息技术与城市极化
我们发现,自20世纪80年代以来,不同城市之间的信息技术投资差异一直是就业和工资两极分化的关键驱动因素。使用一个新的数据集,我们建立了两个程式化的事实:IT投资在大型和昂贵城市的公司中最高,常规认知职业的下降在大型和昂贵城市中最为普遍。为了解释这些事实,我们提出了一个模型机制,其中IT替代常规工人导致大城市由于更高的生活成本和更高的工资而更高的IT采用率。利用空间均衡模型对1990 - 2015年间信息技术对劳动力市场的影响进行了分析。我们发现,IT价格的下跌解释了常规和非常规认知工作之间工资差距扩大的50%。IT价格的下降也解释了28%的就业从常规认知工作转向非常规认知工作的原因。此外,我们的估计表明,IT的影响在不同的空间是不平衡的。在成本较高的地区,常规的认知工作被取代的情况更严重,常规和非常规认知工作之间的工资差距也更大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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