This paper presents instrumental variables estimates of the effects of firm tenure, occupation specific work experience, industry specific work experience, and general work experience on wages using data from the 1979 Cohort of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. A key feature of the empirical work presented in this paper is that the returns to human capital are allowed to vary across occupations, in contrast to existing research which has constrained the parameters of the wage equation to be the same across occupations. The estimates indicate that both occupation and industry specific human capital are key determinants of wages, and the importance of various types of human capital varies widely across one-digit occupations. Human ca...
This paper departs from the conventional assumption that divides accumulated in work human capital i...
Labor economists have long used occupation indicators as a proxy for unobserved skills that a worker...
A key tenet of the theory of human capital is that investment in skills results in higher productivi...
This paper presents instrumental variables estimates of the effects of firm tenure, occupation speci...
Ever since Mincer (1974), years of labor market experience were used to approximate individual's gen...
We find that returns to occupational tenure are substantial. Everything else being constant, 5 years...
In this paper we challenge the conventional assumption that accumulated human capital can be divided...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
Recent papers by Neal (1995) and Parent (2000), using different methods, provided evidence in suppor...
In this paper we study the sources of wage growth. We identify the contribution to such growth of ge...
In recent years the human capital earnings model has been widely used as a framework for examining t...
[[abstract]]Using data from Taiwan's Manpower Utilization Survey (1979–2000), this paper finds evide...
This paper develops a new approach to measuring human capital specificity, in the context of college...
Using data from Taiwan’s Manpower Utilization Survey (1979-1999), this paper finds evidence that sup...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
This paper departs from the conventional assumption that divides accumulated in work human capital i...
Labor economists have long used occupation indicators as a proxy for unobserved skills that a worker...
A key tenet of the theory of human capital is that investment in skills results in higher productivi...
This paper presents instrumental variables estimates of the effects of firm tenure, occupation speci...
Ever since Mincer (1974), years of labor market experience were used to approximate individual's gen...
We find that returns to occupational tenure are substantial. Everything else being constant, 5 years...
In this paper we challenge the conventional assumption that accumulated human capital can be divided...
Previous studies assume that labor market skills are either fully general or specific to a firm. Thi...
Recent papers by Neal (1995) and Parent (2000), using different methods, provided evidence in suppor...
In this paper we study the sources of wage growth. We identify the contribution to such growth of ge...
In recent years the human capital earnings model has been widely used as a framework for examining t...
[[abstract]]Using data from Taiwan's Manpower Utilization Survey (1979–2000), this paper finds evide...
This paper develops a new approach to measuring human capital specificity, in the context of college...
Using data from Taiwan’s Manpower Utilization Survey (1979-1999), this paper finds evidence that sup...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
This paper departs from the conventional assumption that divides accumulated in work human capital i...
Labor economists have long used occupation indicators as a proxy for unobserved skills that a worker...
A key tenet of the theory of human capital is that investment in skills results in higher productivi...