Working Paper Revision
The Evolution of Technological Substitution in Low-Wage Labor Markets
Abstract: This paper uses minimum wage hikes to evaluate the susceptibility of low-wage employment to technological substitution. We find that automation is accelerating and supplanting a broader set of low-wage routine jobs in the decade since the Financial Crisis. Simultaneously, low-wage interpersonal jobs are increasing and offsetting routine job loss. However, interpersonal job growth does not appear to be enough – as it was previous to the Financial Crisis – to fully offset the negative effects of automation on low-wage routine jobs. Employment losses are most evident among minority workers who experience outsized losses at routine-intensive jobs and smaller gains at interpersonal jobs.
Keywords: Low-wage automation; routine-biased technical change; minimum wages;
JEL Classification: J15; J21; J24; J38; O33;
https://doi.org/10.21033/wp-2020-16
Access Documents
File(s):
File format is application/pdf
https://www.chicagofed.org/-/media/publications/working-papers/2020/wp2020-16-pdf.pdf
Description: full text
Authors
Bibliographic Information
Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Part of Series: Working Paper Series
Publication Date: 2022-03-01
Number: WP-2020-16
Related Works
- Working Paper Revision (2022-03-01) : You are here.
- Working Paper Original (2020-07-14) : The Evolution of Technological Substitution in Low-Wage Labor Markets