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Norwegian

Relative Unemployment Rates and Skill-Biased Technological Change

Link to article:

[PDF]

Authors:

Røed, Knut

Year:

1999

Reference:

Memorandum
Number in series: 38

Summary

A popular explanation for the European unemployment problem is that relative wages have failed to adjust to changes in relative productivities. Many economists reject this hypothesis on the ground that the ratios of low- to high-skill unemployment have not increased. Building on a search model, I show that relative unemployment rates are affected by skill-neutral, as well as skill-biased shocks; hence stable ratios are, at least theoretically, consistent with a mix of skill-biased and skill-neutral shocks. However, I question the extent to which the relevant skills are observable. Micro evidence from Norway indicates that rising inequality in the unemployment distribution has little to do with educational attainment.

JEL:

J31, J64.

Keywords:

Unemployment, Job search, Wage compression, Skill-bias.

Project:

Oppdragsgiver: Norges forskningsråd
Oppdragsgivers prosjektnr.:
Frisch prosjekt: 1203 - Sorting, exposed groups and labour market programmes