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Behavior, Institutions and Development Seminar: Federico Rossi, 'Economic Development according to Chandler'

Education Policy Educational Outcomes

Federico Rossi (University of Warwick) has also worked on the economics of education, and will be the next speaker in the BID Seminar series. He will present his paper “Economic Development according to Chandler”, joint with Niklas Engbom, Hannes Malmberg, Tommaso Porzio and Todd Schoellman. The abstract is below.

The seminar will take place on Thursday, March 20, 11:00-12:15, in Auditorium 4.

The full calendar for the BID seminar series can be found here: https://www.tse-fr.eu/groups/behavior-institutions-and-development?tabs=5

Abstract: Business historian Alfred Chandler showed that firms in the Second Industrial Revolution had to adopt managerial capitalism to benefit fully from new technologies that leveraged economies of scale or scope and raised productivity. We show that the same forces are relevant for understanding economic development today. Large firms around the world use white-collar labor more intensively. Developing countries have low shares of white-collar workers, accounted for entirely by low skill levels. Motivated by these facts, we develop a multi-sector general equilibrium model of the link between skills and the adoption of managerial capitalism. The model extends the occupational choice model of Lucas (1978) by allowing entrepreneurs to decide the share of administrative tasks performed by hired professionals. Professionalizing a higher share of tasks brings the firm closer to constant returns to scale and leads to larger firm size. We calibrate the model to replicate joint patterns of education, firm size, sectoral choices, and occupational choices in the average middle-income country. Our counterfactuals show that growth in the supply of skills can help explain the adoption of managerial capitalism, whereas structural transformation by itself cannot.