Demographics and Automation [Automation and Demographic Change]

Publicado en

  • The Review of Economic Studies

Resumen

  • We argue theoretically and document empirically that aging leads to greater (industrial) automation, because it creates a shortage of middle-aged workers specializing in manual production tasks. We show that demographic change is associated with greater adoption of robots and other automation technologies across countries and with more robotics-related activities across U.S. commuting zones. We also document more automation innovation in countries undergoing faster aging. Our directed technological change model predicts that the response of automation technologies to aging should be more pronounced in industries that rely more on middle-aged workers and those that present greater opportunities for automation and that productivity should improve and the labor share should decline relatively in industries that are more amenable to automation. The evidence supports all four of these predictions.

fecha de publicación

  • 2022

Líneas de investigación

  • Aging
  • Automation
  • Demographic change
  • Directed technological change
  • Economic growth
  • Productivity
  • Robots
  • Tasks
  • Technology

Volumen

  • 89

Issue

  • 1