Papers
AEJ Policy2025

Routine-Biased Technological Change and Endogenous Skill Investments

Danyelle Branco, Bladimir Carrillo, Wilman Iglesias

Source versions
1
Latest record
2025-08-01
Primary source
AEJ Policy
TL;DR

We investigate how individuals alter their educational investments in response to routine-biased technology.

AEJ PolicyEducationLaborStructural
Metadata matches
Sources
AEJ Policy
Fields
EducationLaborPublic Finance
Methods and data
Structural
Abstract

We investigate how individuals alter their educational investments in response to routine-biased technology. We find that individuals growing up in robot-impacted areas are more likely to complete a bachelor’s degree and experience a relative increase in earnings. Changes in the skill premium and opportunity cost appear to drive these effects. To interpret these findings, we estimate a model of endogenous skill acquisition where changes in the demand and supply of skills shape the path of earnings. Counterfactual simulations suggest that the endogenous skill response cannot fully undo the adverse earnings effects of automation unless there are sufficiently generous educational subsidies. (JEL I26, J22, J23, J24, J31)

Source versions
AEJ Policy2025-08-01
American Economic Journal Economic Policy 17(3):236-280
10.1257/pol.20220407
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