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Trade, Knowledge, and the Industrial Revolution Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Download info | Related research | Statistics Kevin H. O'Rourke
Ahmed S. Rahman
Alan M. Taylor
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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 profitmaximising 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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Keywords: Endogenous growth ; Demography ; Trade ; Other versions of this item:
Paper O'Rourke, Kevin H & Rahman, Ahmed & Taylor, Alan M, 2007.
"Trade, Knowledge, and the Industrial Revolution ,"
CEPR Discussion Papers
6293, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) Kevin H. O’Rourke & Ahmed S. Rahman & Alan M. Taylor, 2007.
"Trade, Knowledge and the Industrial Revolution ,"
Development Working Papers
230, Centro Studi Luca d\'Agliano, University of Milano.
[Downloadable!] Kevin H. O'Rourke & Ahmed S. Rahman & Alan M. Taylor, 2007.
"Trade, Knowledge, and the Industrial Revolution ,"
NBER Working Papers
13057, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) This paper has been announced in the following NEP Reports :
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