Should the Personal Computer Be Considered a Technological Revolution? Evidence from U.S. Metropolitan Areas
The introduction and diffusion of personal computers are widely viewed as a technological revolution. Using U.S. metropolitan area–level panel data, this paper asks whether links between PC adoption, educational attainment, and the return to skill conform to a model of technological revolutions in which the speed and extent of adoption are endogenous. The model implies that cities will adjust differently to the arrival of a more skill-intensive means of production, with the returns to skill increasing most where skill is abundant and its return is low. We show that the cross-city data fit many of the predictions of the model during the period 1980–2000, the PC diffusion era.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Beaudry, Paul ; Doms, Mark ; Lewis, Ethan |
Published in: |
Journal of Political Economy. - University of Chicago Press. - Vol. 118.2010, 5, p. 988-988
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Publisher: |
University of Chicago Press |
Saved in:
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