Modern Economy

Volume 9, Issue 7 (July 2018)

ISSN Print: 2152-7245   ISSN Online: 2152-7261

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.96  Citations  

Factor Substitution and Employment

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 307KB)  PP. 1127-1136  
DOI: 10.4236/me.2018.97074    878 Downloads   1,922 Views  
Author(s)

ABSTRACT

This paper explores how employment among an educated workforce depends on production technology represented by factor substitution and factor-augmenting technical progress. We consider a variant of the Diamond overlapping generations model that can explain the empirical finding about the elasticity of substitution being less than unity observed in some developed economies. Depending on factor substitution, a decline in the wage rate has positive and negative effects on employment. When the elasticity of substitution is less than unity, a low wage rate can imply a low employment rate as well as a low human capital level. Given the elasticity of substitution, being less than unity, labor-augmenting technical progress can decrease the employment rate and human capital level via a decrease in the marginal product of labor.

Share and Cite:

Nakamura, H. (2018) Factor Substitution and Employment. Modern Economy, 9, 1127-1136. doi: 10.4236/me.2018.97074.

Cited by

No relevant information.

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.