Several econometrical recent studies carried on international comparison data puts into question the opinion according to which education as a human capital indicator would encourage growth. This result comes in a context of opening to the outside. The evaluations are made on data of dynamic panel with the generalized moment's method GMM, with a tertiary schooling rate as indicator reflecting the human capital. This human capital coefficient varies stochastically from a country to the other according to national features. Several among them permit to explain these differences of quality: educational infrastructures, capacity to provide education in an equal way, initial endowment in human capital in case of opening. We introduce several v...
The relationship between human capital and economic growth has evoked an abundant empirical literatu...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...
Several econometrical recent studies carried on international comparison data puts into question th...
The purpose of this paper is mainly to analyze the long-run relationship between education and the e...
In this paper we will focus on education. Indeed, most theoretical analyzes have confirmed that huma...
In this paper we will focus on education. Indeed, most theoretical analyzes have confirmed that huma...
This study is a panel data analysis of the relation between trade openness, human capital and econom...
© 2018, Universidad del Zulia. All rights reserved. Therefore, the main objective of this article is...
Do openness to trade and higher levels of human capital promote faster productivity growth? That the...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Technology transfer by international trade and foreign direct investment is the most important posit...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Since the seminal work of Solow (1956), along with the accumulation of factors related to physical c...
The relationship between human capital and economic growth has evoked an abundant empirical literatu...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...
Several econometrical recent studies carried on international comparison data puts into question th...
The purpose of this paper is mainly to analyze the long-run relationship between education and the e...
In this paper we will focus on education. Indeed, most theoretical analyzes have confirmed that huma...
In this paper we will focus on education. Indeed, most theoretical analyzes have confirmed that huma...
This study is a panel data analysis of the relation between trade openness, human capital and econom...
© 2018, Universidad del Zulia. All rights reserved. Therefore, the main objective of this article is...
Do openness to trade and higher levels of human capital promote faster productivity growth? That the...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Technology transfer by international trade and foreign direct investment is the most important posit...
Human capital is the “know how” of the work force that increases the productivity of each worker. In...
Since the seminal work of Solow (1956), along with the accumulation of factors related to physical c...
The relationship between human capital and economic growth has evoked an abundant empirical literatu...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...
Recent literature finds no econometric support on panel data for the idea that human capital contrib...