Considers whether Dominican Republic labor market outcomes suffer from capital-biased technical change, by (1) studying the recent evolution of the labor income share to test whether biased technical change can help explain why observed strong economic growth has not translated into improved labor market outcomes; and (2) analyzing whether the wage stagnation in the context of favorable economic growth results from a decrease in labor income shares. If capital-biased technical change proves a factor, then sectors experiencing higher output growth should also experience a decrease in labor income share. The labor share fell significantly during the 2003-04 banking crisis, resulting in a significant wage correction, and although the labor share has recovered to precrisis levels, it remains low by international comparison though similar to other developing Latin American economies. Declines in labor share remain notable in the sectors largely driving economic growth, possibly owing to "biased" technical change increasing productivity while lowering labor demand.