Affiliation:
1. Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo , Hagey Hall, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1 , Canada
Abstract
Abstract
While the progress of the knowledge economy is inexorable, this paper argues that partisan politics and labor market institutions can affect the direction in which the knowledge economy progresses. In particular, a combination of corporatist industrial relations systems and left partisanship tends to foster greater wage restraint, and such a wage outcome tends to encourage the greater adoption of communications technology than information-processing technology in the economy. This reorientation of the knowledge economy toward communications technology, in turn, has egalitarian distributive implications. In particular, the greater adoption of communications technology reduces wage inequality across the board in lower 90–10, 50–10, as well as 90–50 wage ratios. These arguments are tested using data across 15–21 OECD countries (1970–2015).
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference66 articles.
1. Directed Technical Change;Acemoglu;Review of Economic Studies,2002
2. When Does Labor Scarcity Encourage Innovation?;Acemoglu;Journal of Political Economy,2010
3. Modeling Automation;Acemoglu;American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings,2018
4. Interactions between Private and Public Sector Wages;Afonso;Journal of Macroeconomics,2014