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Original Articles

Technological change and employment: some micro evidence from Italy

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Pages 373-376 | Published online: 19 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

Consistently with previous evidence of the microeconomic literature on the subject and applying GMM-SYS on a unique Italian panel dataset, this study finds a significant – although small in size – positive relationship between innovation and employment at the firm's level in the 1990s.

Acknowledgement

Financial support by Cofinanziamento MIUR 2001/2001133591-002-Bologna Unit: ‘Patterns and determinants of skill-biased technical change in a medium-technology country’ (Responsible: Prof. Enrico Santarelli) is gratefully acknowledged.

Notes

1 If the generic xi, t variable is assumed to be endogenous in the sense that xi, t is correlated with ν i, t and earlier shocks, but not with ν i, t + 1 and subsequent shocks, the lagged values xi, t− 2 and longer lags are valid instrumental variables in the first differenced equations for periods t = 3, … , T. If the variable is predetermined in the sense that x i, t may still be correlated with ν i ,  t − 1 and earlier shocks, then xi, t− 1 is additionally available as a valid instrument in the first differenced equation. If a stronger assumption is made, that xi, t is strictly exogenous, then the complete time series of the xi, t or the contemporaneous first difference are valid instrumental variables on each of first-differenced equations (Bond, Citation2002).

2 The rule linking the two estimators is the following: if xi, t− j is a good instrument for the equation in the first difference, hence Δx i, t− ( j− 1) will be a good instrument for the equation in levels if Δxi, t− ( j− 1) is not correlated with ε i .

3 AR(1) estimated coefficients of employment and innovative investment are respectively 0.98 and 0.89, both of them significant at the 99% level of confidence.

4 In the second Italian Community Innovation Survey (CIS) covering 1994–1996, 46.7% of the 19 157 innovative firms declared they had innovated through machinery and equipment, meanwhile only 27% used internal R&D activities (ISTAT, Citation1997, Table 11).

5 The GMM-SYS estimates are presented in the one-step version, consistent with possible heteroscedasticity and more reliable than the two-step estimates needed for obtaining the validity tests of the model (Blundell and Bond, Citation1998; Doornik et al., Citation1999).

6 Since OLS tends to overestimate the coefficient of the lagged dependent variable and within estimator tends to underestimate it, the GMM-SYS estimate of it should assume an intermediate value.

7 Results from the Differenced Sargan test give a further support to the implementation of the GMM-SYS methodology with respect to the GMM-DIF. Differenced Sargan test can be used to test the hypothesis concerning the validity of some instruments. The full set of instruments under H0 is tested against a strict subset under H1. The test is asymptotically χ2 distributed with degrees of freedom equal to the difference between the usual Sargan test under H0 and H1. In this case, the test is the validity of H0 GMM-SYS against H1 GMM-DIF and the value is 19.66 with 13 degrees of freedom suggesting not to reject the null hypothesis.

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