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"Wage inequality in the United States has increased in the past two decades, and most researchers suspect that the main causes are changes in technology, international competition, and factor supplies. The relative importance of these causes in explaining wage inequality is important for policy making and is controversial, partly because there has been no research which has directly estimated the joint impact of these different causes. In this paper, we view wages as arising out of a competitive general equilibrium where goods prices, technology and factor supplies jointly determine outputs and factor prices. We specify an empirical model which allows us to estimate the general equilibrium relationship between wages and technology, prices, and factor supplies. The model is based on the neoclassical theory of production, and is implemented by assuming that GDP is a function of prices, technology levels, and supplies of capital and different types of labor. We treat final goods prices as being partially determined in international markets, and we use data on trends in the international economy as instruments for U.S. prices. We find that relative factor supply and relative price changes are both important in explaining the growing return to skill. In particular, we find that capital accumulation and the fall in the price of traded goods served to increase the return to education"--Federal Reserve Bank of New York web site.
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U.S. wages in general equilibrium: the effects of prices, technology, and factor supplies, 1963-1991
1999, National Bureau of Economic Research
in English
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U.S. wages in general equilibrium: the effects of prices, technology, and factor supplies, 1963-1991
1999, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Electronic resource
in English
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Book Details
Edition Notes
"February 1999."
JEL no. F1, J3, D5.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 28-32).
Electronic access limited to Binghamton University faculty, staff and students for instructional and research purposes only.
Electronic version available via the Internet at the NBER World Wide Web site.
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