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?:about
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  • In a seminal paper Graetz and Michaels (2018) find that robots increase labor productivity and TFP, lower output prices and adversely affect the employment share of low-skilled labor. We show that these effects hold only, when comparing hardly-robotizing with highly-robotizing sectors and collapse, when only the latter are analyzed. Controlling for demographic workforce variables reestablishes the productivity effects, but still rejects positive wage effects and skill-biased technological change. Additionally, we find no effects, when the investigation period is extended to the most recent data (2008-2015) and document non-monotonicity in one of the instruments, which calls the respective results into question. (xsd:string)
?:contributor
?:dateModified
  • 2021 (xsd:gyear)
?:datePublished
  • 2021 (xsd:gyear)
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  • true (xsd:boolean)
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?:inLanguage
  • en (xsd:string)
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?:name
  • Robots at Work? Pitfalls of Industry Level Data (xsd:string)
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?:publicationType
  • Arbeitspapier (xsd:string)
?:sourceInfo
  • GESIS-SSOAR (xsd:string)
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?:urn
  • urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-73481-7 ()
?:volumeNumber
  • 30 (xsd:string)