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Training, automation, and wages : international worker-level evidence / Oliver Falck, Yuchen Guo, Christina Langer, Valentin Lindlacher, Simon Wiederhold
VerfasserFalck, Oliver ; Guo, Yuchen ; Langer, Christina ; Lindlacher, Valentin ; Wiederhold, Simon
KörperschaftLeibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle
ErschienenHalle (Saale), Germany : Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH) - Member of the Leibniz Association, 17. Dezember 2024
Umfang1 Online-Ressource (III, 47 Seiten, A-21, 1,64 MB) : Diagramme
SpracheEnglisch
SerieIWH-Diskussionspapiere ; 2024, no. 27
URNurn:nbn:de:gbv:3:2-1107826 
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Training, automation, and wages [1.64 mb]
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Job training is widely regarded as crucial for protecting workers from automation yet there is a lack of empirical evidence to support this belief. Using internationally harmonized data from over 90 000 workers across 37 industrialized countries we construct an individual-level measure of automation risk based on tasks performed at work. Our analysis reveals substantial within-occupation variation in automation risk overlooked by existing occupation-level measures. To assess whether job training mitigates automation risk we exploit within-occupation and within-industry variation. Additionally we employ entropy balancing to re-weight workers without job training based on a rich set of background characteristics including tested numeracy skills as a proxy for unobserved ability. We find that job training reduces workers’ automation risk by 4.7 percentage points equivalent to 10 percent of the average automation risk. The training-induced reduction in automation risk accounts for one-fifth of the wage returns to job training. Job training is effective in reducing automation risk and increasing wages across nearly all countries underscoring the external validity of our findings. Women tend to benefit more from training than men with the advantage becoming particularly pronounced at older ages.