Skill Premium in Sweden, 1900–1950
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This paper documents the evolution of wage differentials between skilled and
unskilled workers in Sweden throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Using
newly digitized data on income taxes, this paper demonstrates that the skill premium
decreased throughout 1900–1950, and most rapidly from 1930 onward. This is similar
to the fall in skill premium documented by Goldin and Katz for the United States.
However, unlike in the United States, the fall in skill premia in Sweden cannot be
attributed to a supply shock of high school graduates. Rather, this paper shows that
incomes of the low- and unskilled increased faster than those for more-skilled. Despite
of similar technological change and rapid economic development, Sweden did not
exhibit a comparable rise in high school education as the United States. The paper
suggests other mechanisms for the falling skill premium in Sweden, such as informal
schooling, emigration, and trade union activity.
Description
Keywords
Skill premium, industrialization, Sweden, income inequality