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Labor supply and directed technical change: Evidence from the termination of the Bracero program in 1964

By: San, Shmuel.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 15(1), Jan, 2023: p.136-163. In: American Economic Journal: Applied EconomicsSummary: This paper studies the impact of labor supply on the creation of new technology, exploiting a large exogenous shock to the US agricultural labor supply caused by the termination of the Bracero agreements between the US and Mexico at the end of 1964. Using a text-search algorithm allocating patents to crops, I show a negative labor-supply shock induced a sharp increase in innovation in technologies related to more affected crops. The effect is stronger for technology related to labor-intensive production tasks. Farm-value dynamics indicate that, despite the positive technology reaction, the policy change was undesirable for farm owners.- Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
15(1), Jan, 2023: p.136-163 Available AR128493

This paper studies the impact of labor supply on the creation of new technology, exploiting a large exogenous shock to the US agricultural labor supply caused by the termination of the Bracero agreements between the US and Mexico at the end of 1964. Using a text-search algorithm allocating patents to crops, I show a negative labor-supply shock induced a sharp increase in innovation in technologies related to more affected crops. The effect is stronger for technology related to labor-intensive production tasks. Farm-value dynamics indicate that, despite the positive technology reaction, the policy change was undesirable for farm owners.- Reproduced

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