Trade, Knowledge, and the Industrial Revolution

Kevin H. O'Rourke, Ahmed S. Rahman, Alan M. Taylor

NBER Working Paper No. 13057
Issued in April 2007
NBER Program(s):   DAE    IFM    ITI    PR

---- Abstract -----

Technological change was unskilled-labor-biased during the early Industrial Revolution of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, but is skill-biased today. This fact is not embedded in extant unified growth models. We develop a model of the transition to sustained economic growth which can endogenously account for both these facts, by allowing the factor bias of technological innovations to reflect the profit-maximising decisions of innovators. Endowments dictated that the initial stages of the Industrial Revolution be unskilled-labor biased. The transition to skill-biased technological change was due to a growth in "Baconian knowledge" and international trade. Simulations show that the model does a good job of tracking reality, at least until the mass education reforms of the late nineteenth century.

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