Struck, Clemens C.Clemens C.StruckVelic, AdnanAdnanVelic2019-05-162019-05-162019 the A2019-05201912http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10494To rationalize a substantial income share of labor despite progressive task automation over the centuries, we present a simple model in which demand moves along a vertically differentiated production structure toward goods of increasing sophistication. Automation of more sophisticated goods requires capital of increasing quality. Quality capital remains scarce along the growth path. This is why labor keeps up a substantial fraction of income. Real capital, however, that is capital measured in units of the quality of some base year, becomes abundant relative to labor. While our model features an entirely different mechanism, we show that its aggregate representation is the one of a neoclassical growth model with labor-augmenting technical change.enUzawa's theoremAutomationGoods qualityStructural changeReallocationsGrowthNonhomothetic preferencesHierarchical demandE23E24E25J23J24O14O31O33Automation, New Technology and Non-Homothetic PreferencesWorking Paper118https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/