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The Structure of Firm R&D, the Factor Intensity of Production, and Skill Bias

James D. Adams1,2

1 University of Florida · 2 University of North Florida

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1999

This paper explores the effect of research and development (R&D) and capital on factor intensity and skill bias in a sample of manufacturing plants. Firm and industry R&D as well as plant level capital increase the factor intensity of labor over materials. In contrast, skill bias originates in portions of capital and R&D. Equipment capital and firm R&D in the same product as a plant are consistently skill biased, while structures are biased against skill. Furthermore, general firm and industry R&D increase investment in equipment but not structures. This shows that the skill bias of R&D occurs through two distinct channels. First, firm R&D specific to the product increases the relative demand for skilled labor directly and in the short run through the cost function. Second, general firm and industry R&D exert an additional skill bias by favoring equipment over structures in the long run, demonstrating the broader compass of the skill bias of R&D over time.

DOI
10.1162/003465399558256
Volume
81 (3)
Pages
499-510
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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