The Complexity Premium


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Date

2025-05-23

Publication Type

Working Paper

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

We introduce a task-based framework for modeling production in which certain tasks are too complex for many workers to perform. In such an environment, workers’ wages may significantly diverge from their relative productivities: Workers with marginally higher skill levels may obtain a large additional wage premium on top of the skill premium, which we call complexity premium. We apply our framework to explain past employment and wage polarization and estimate model parameters for the U.S. labor market between 2001 and 2019. Beyond a rising skill level and skill premium, we find that the complexity of tasks increases and employees performing more complex tasks earn a significant complexity premium, which accounts for up to 43 percent of their wages. Finally, we explore the effects of artificial intelligence and find it may aggravate wage inequality, with an ambiguous effect on complexity premia.

Publication status

published

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Pages / Article No.

Publisher

Centre for Economic Policy Research

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Subject

Skills; Technological change; Tasks; Complexity

Organisational unit

03729 - Gersbach, Hans / Gersbach, Hans check_circle
06338 - KOF FB KOF Lab / KOF FB KOF Lab check_circle
02544 - KOF Institut / KOF Swiss Economic Institute

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