The Bias of Technological Change in Europe. WWWforEurope Working Paper No. 98
WWWforEurope: Welfare, Wealth and Work for Europe, Mai 2015, 52 Seiten
Auftraggeber: Kammer für Arbeiter und Angestellte für Wien – Österreichische Forschungsförderungsgesellschaft mbH – Österreichische Austauschdienst-GesmbH – Europäische Kommission, Rahmenprogramm
Studie von: Österreichisches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung
This paper is concerned with measuring and influencing the direction of technological change. First, it provides a comprehensive
assessment of the factor bias of technological change using panel data from the World Input-Output Database (WIOD) for 25
EU countries from 1995 to 2009. We measure the bias with respect to the inputs capital, energy, non-energy materials and three
types of labour (low-, medium- and high-skilled). For this purpose, the factor cost share approach based on the duality of
production theory is applied. Estimating the system of cost share equations derived from a translog cost function, we find
that technological change was low- and medium-skilled labour-saving, high-skilled labour-using, and energy- and materials-using.
Second, the paper addresses the question how technological change could be redirected towards saving more energy and less
labour. Patent applications in energy- and labour-saving technology fields are used to model the direction of technological
change. We construct stocks of patents in these fields and integrate them into the system of cost share equations as proxies
for the level of technology. Upon finding that they were indeed energy and labour saving over our sample period, we regress
them on policy variables to identify instruments for shifting the bias away from saving labour towards saving energy. We conclude
that one way to achieve this, at least partly, would be an increase in the energy tax rate coupled with a matching reduction
in the social security contributions paid by employers for low-skilled workers.
Forschungsbereich:Industrie-, Innovations- und internationale Ökonomie