Pascal Restrepo

E95982

Pascal Restrepo is an economist known for his research on automation, labor markets, and technological change, often in collaboration with Daron Acemoglu.


Statements (49)
Predicate Object
instanceOf economist
authorOf Artificial Intelligence, Automation, and Work
Demographics and Automation
Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets
Tasks, Automation, and the Rise in US Wage Inequality
The Race Between Man and Machine: Implications of Technology for Growth, Factor Shares, and Employment
The Wrong Kind of AI? Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Labor Demand
coAuthor Daron Acemoglu
collaboratesWith Daron Acemoglu
countryOfCitizenship Chile
degree PhD in Economics
educatedAt Massachusetts Institute of Technology
employer Boston University
fieldOfWork automation and labor
economic growth
inequality
labor economics
macroeconomics
technological change
hasAcademicAdvisor Daron Acemoglu
hasPublication Artificial Intelligence, Automation, and Work
Demographics and Automation
Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets
Tasks, Automation, and the Rise in US Wage Inequality
The Race Between Man and Machine: Implications of Technology for Growth, Factor Shares, and Employment
The Wrong Kind of AI? Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Labor Demand
languageSpoken English
Spanish
nationality Chilean
notableFor collaborations with Daron Acemoglu
research on the distributional effects of technological change
research on the impact of automation on employment
research on the impact of robots on labor markets
notableIdea task-based framework for automation and labor demand
occupation researcher
university professor
positionHeld Assistant Professor of Economics at Boston University
researchInterest artificial intelligence and labor
automation
industrial robots
labor share of income
political economy of technology
productivity growth
skill-biased technological change
wage inequality
studiesTopic effects of automation on employment polarization
effects of robots on wages
interaction between demographics and automation adoption
policy responses to technological change

Referenced by (1)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Daron Acemoglu
coAuthor

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