Jones (2014) examines development accounting with imperfect substitutability between different types of skills in the production of output. He finds that human capital variation can account for the totality of the variation in income across countries. We show that this finding is entirely due to an assumption that the relative wage of skilled workers is solely determined by attributes of workers (once the supply of skilled workers is accounted for). If skill premia are predominantly determined by technology, institutions, and other features of the economic environment, human capital differences explain none of the variation in income per worker
Research aimed at understanding cross-country income differences finds that inputs of human and phys...
This thesis investigates the causes of the contradictory conclusions of Pritchett (1996) and De la F...
Differences in human capital explain approximately one-half of the productivity variation across cou...
Benjamin Jones (2014) revisits the measurement of human capital for the purposes of development acco...
This paper explores a possible limitation of generalized human capital models that operate by relaxi...
We build a model of heterogeneous individuals − who make investments in schooling quantity and quali...
We develop a quantitative theory of human capital investments in order to evaluate the magnitude of ...
To explain differences in output per worker across countries, the authors test for the workings of a...
Human Capital and Development Accounting Revisited. I quantify the effects on development accounting...
In this paper, we investigate the nature of income inequality across nations by first estimating, te...
This paper reconsiders the traditional approach to human capital measurement in the study of cross-c...
No question has perhaps attracted as much attention in the economics liter-ature as “Why are some co...
In 1960 Theodore Schultz expounded a human capital theory of economic growth that includes three ele...
This paper develops a tractable, heterogeneous agents general equilibrium model where individuals ha...
Empirical studies assume that the macro Mincer return on schooling is con- stant across countries. U...
Research aimed at understanding cross-country income differences finds that inputs of human and phys...
This thesis investigates the causes of the contradictory conclusions of Pritchett (1996) and De la F...
Differences in human capital explain approximately one-half of the productivity variation across cou...
Benjamin Jones (2014) revisits the measurement of human capital for the purposes of development acco...
This paper explores a possible limitation of generalized human capital models that operate by relaxi...
We build a model of heterogeneous individuals − who make investments in schooling quantity and quali...
We develop a quantitative theory of human capital investments in order to evaluate the magnitude of ...
To explain differences in output per worker across countries, the authors test for the workings of a...
Human Capital and Development Accounting Revisited. I quantify the effects on development accounting...
In this paper, we investigate the nature of income inequality across nations by first estimating, te...
This paper reconsiders the traditional approach to human capital measurement in the study of cross-c...
No question has perhaps attracted as much attention in the economics liter-ature as “Why are some co...
In 1960 Theodore Schultz expounded a human capital theory of economic growth that includes three ele...
This paper develops a tractable, heterogeneous agents general equilibrium model where individuals ha...
Empirical studies assume that the macro Mincer return on schooling is con- stant across countries. U...
Research aimed at understanding cross-country income differences finds that inputs of human and phys...
This thesis investigates the causes of the contradictory conclusions of Pritchett (1996) and De la F...
Differences in human capital explain approximately one-half of the productivity variation across cou...