Elasticity of substitution between capital and labour
Price elasticity of the demand of the output
Elasticity of the supply of other inputs
Labour share in total cost
(The greater these, the more elastic LD is)
Labour demand elasticity: the more inelastic, the greater chances the union has to succeed
When their cross-elasticity of factor demand is positive (negative)
Endogeneity problems: reverse causality and omitted variables.
We can solve them using instrumental variables
It must be relevant and valid:
Relevant: strongly correlated with the explanatory variable
Valid: uncorrelated with the error term
The isocost line is tangent to the isoquant.
In the optimum, any dollat spent on an addtional worker hour or unit of capital yields the same additional output.
MPE/w = MPK/r
A technological change that increases the demand of high-skill labour and reduces the demand for low-skilled, with the underlying hypothesis that technology acts as a substitute for low-skill workers but as a complement for high-skill
The phenomenon in which wages and employment fall particularly in the middle of the education distribution, because a skill biased technological change reduces the demand for routine tasks relative to high-skilled and blue collar jobs.
As a consequence, there is a wage gap between high and low skill occupations and a reduction in social mobility