Masayuki Morikawa
Papers
3
Total Citations
93
H-Index
3
About
Masayuki Morikawa is a prominent Japanese economist whose research sits at the intersection of labor economics, technology adoption, and industrial organization, with a particular focus on the transformative effects of artificial intelligence and robotics on firms and workers. Drawing on large-scale original survey data — including responses from over 3,000 Japanese firms and 10,000 individuals — Morikawa has produced some of the most empirically grounded early evidence on how businesses and employees perceive the rise of AI and automation. His work on technology-skill complementarity demonstrates that firms employing highly educated workforces are more likely to view AI as an opportunity rather than a threat, offering nuanced insight beyond simple displacement narratives. His 2016 firm-level study has garnered 55 citations, establishing it as a foundational reference in the field, while his worker-focused research illuminates which individual characteristics — such as education level and occupation type — shape fears about job loss to automation. Collectively, Morikawa's contributions have helped bridge the gap between abstract technological forecasting and concrete empirical evidence, making his work essential reading for researchers and policymakers grappling with the future of work in an increasingly automated global economy.
Research Focus
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Top Papers
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