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The Urban-Rural Divide in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Assessing the Effects of Technology and Automation on Regional Labor Markets

Author

Listed:
  • Chau Tran Bao
  • Khoi Nguyen Dinh Nguyen
  • Ha Nguyen Manh
  • Ngan Nguyen Thi Thuy

Abstract

Automation and artificial intelligence (AI) are reshaping labor demand unevenly across space, creating an urgent imperative for place-sensitive education and workforce policy. This study asks whether regional exposure to automation and to AI relates to local employment and wages in opposite ways, and whether those relationships differ between urban and rural regions -- two questions whose answers carry direct implications for how skills training and digital education should be targeted. Using a region-by-year panel and shift-share measures of technological exposure built from baseline industry and occupation composition, we estimate two-way fixed-effects and instrumental-variable models that interact exposure with an urban indicator. The framework distinguishes automation exposure, concentrated in routine work, from AI exposure, concentrated in cognitive work -- a distinction that maps directly onto the types of skills that education systems need to develop or preserve. Estimates show automation exposure lowering employment and wages, with the employment loss cushioned in cities, while AI exposure raises wages and concentrates in urban regions. Technology therefore reshapes, rather than simply widens, the divide. The findings argue for place-sensitive policy: weighting reallocation and reskilling support toward routine-exposed rural regions, while extending digital infrastructure and AI-complementary skills outward so that rural workers can share AI's wage gains rather than absorb only automation's losses.

Suggested Citation

  • Chau Tran Bao & Khoi Nguyen Dinh Nguyen & Ha Nguyen Manh & Ngan Nguyen Thi Thuy, 2026. "The Urban-Rural Divide in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Assessing the Effects of Technology and Automation on Regional Labor Markets," Papers 2606.22833, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2606.22833
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