Green Skills
Data
03.08.2015
03.08.2015
Autori
Francesco Vona (OFCE Sciences Po, SKEMA Business School); Giovanni Marin (IRCrES-CNR, OFCE-SciencesPo); Davide Consoli (Ingenio CSIC-UPV); David Popp (Department of Public Administration and International Affairs – The Maxwell School – Syracuse University)
Codice JEL
J24, Q52
J24, Q52
Parole chiave:
Green Skills, Environmental Regulation, Task Model, Workforce Composition, Structural Shocks
Green Skills, Environmental Regulation, Task Model, Workforce Composition, Structural Shocks
Publisher
Climate Change and Sustainable Development
Climate Change and Sustainable Development
Editor
Carlo Carraro
Carlo Carraro
While policymakers talk of ‘green skills’, there is little systematic empirical research on the demand for skills that will be needed to operate and develop green technology. We propose a data-driven methodology to identify green skills and to gauge the ways in which the demand for these competences respond to environmental regulation. We find that green skills are high-level analytical and technical know-how related to the design, production, management and monitoring of technology. Environmental regulation triggers technological and organizational changes that increase the demand for these skills. Our analysis suggests also that this is not just a compositional change in skill demand due to job losses in sectors highly exposed to trade and regulation.
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Suggested citation: Vona, F., G. Marin, D. Consoli, D. Popp, (2015), ‘Green Skills’, Nota di Lavoro 72.2015, Milan, Italy: Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei.