Abstract: "Equilibrium Bias of Technology"
The study of the bias of new technologies is important both as part of the analysis of the
nature of technology adoption and the direction of technological change, and to understand
the distributional implications of new technologies. In this paper, I analyze the equilibrium
bias of technology. I distinguish between the relative bias of technology, which concerns how
the marginal product of a factor changes relative to that of another following the introduction
of new technology, and the absolute bias, which looks only at the effect of new technology on
the marginal product of a factor. The first part of the paper generalizes a number of existing
results in the literature regarding the relative bias of technology. In particular, I show that
when the menu of technological possibilities only allows for factor-augmenting technologies, the
increase in the supply of a factor always induces technological change (or technology adoption)
relatively biased towards that factor. This force can be strong enough to make the relative
marginal product of a factor increasing in response to an increase in its supply, thus leading to
an upward-sloping relative demand curve. However, I also show that the results about relative
bias do not generalize when more general menus of technological possibilities are considered.
The second part of the paper contains the main results. I show that there are much more
general results about absolute bias. I prove that under fairly mild assumptions, an increase in
the supply of a factor always induces changes in technology that are absolutely biased towards
that factor, and these results hold both for small changes and large changes in supplies. Most
importantly, I also determine the conditions under which the induced-technology response will
be strong enough so that the price (marginal product) of a factor increases in response to
an increase in its supply. These conditions correspond to a form of failure of joint concavity
of the aggregate production function of the economy in factors and technology. This type of
failure of joint concavity is quite possible in economies where equilibrium factor demands and
technologies are decided by different agents.