Volver a Working Papers

Paper #1362

Título:
Offshoring and directed technical change
Autores:
Daron Acemoglu, Gino Gancia y Fabrizio Zilibotti
Data:
Noviembre 2012
Resumen:
We study the short- and long-run implications of offshoring on innovation, technology adoption, wage and income inequality in a Ricardian model with directed technical change. In our model, profit maximization determines both the extent of offshoring and the direction of technological progress. A fall in the cost of offshoring induces technical change with an ambiguous factor bias. When the initial offshoring cost is high, an increase in offshoring opportunities triggers a transition with falling real wages for unskilled workers in the West, skill-biased technical change and rising skill premia worldwide. When the offshoring cost is sufficiently low, instead, further increases in offshoring opportunities induce technical change biased in favor of the unskilled workers and may lower the skill premium. Although offshoring improves the welfare of workers in the East, it may benefit or harm unskilled workers in the West depending on parameters, the level of offshoring and the equilibrium growth rate.
Palabras clave:
China, Directed Technical Change, Offshoring, Productivity growth, Skill Premium.
Códigos JEL:
F43, O31, O33.
Área de investigación:
Macroeconomía y Economía Internacional
Publicado en:
American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, Forthcoming

Descargar el paper en formato PDF