A number of economists find that growth and schooling are highly correlated across countries. A model is examined in which the ability to build on the human capital of one's elders plays an important role in linking growth to schooling. The model is calibrated to quantify the strength of the effect of schooling on growth by using evidence from the labor literature on Mincerian returns to education. The upshot is that the impact of schooling on growth explains less than one-third of the empirical cross-country relationship. The ability of reverse causality to explain this empirical relationship is also investigated.
We study the relationship between human capital and growth using a model which encompasses previous ...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
This paper explains why different studies present widely-varying estimates of the effect of increase...
There are strong reasons why education can help promote economic growth that do not always bear out ...
There are strong reasons why education can help promote economic growth that do not always bear out ...
Much has been written in the economic literature about the theoretical and empirical effects of scho...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical investigation of the relationship between human capi...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical investigation of the relationship between human capi...
We investigate why the economics literature often finds a negative relationship between increased s...
International audienceIn spite of the essential role conferred to human capital by endogenous growth...
International audienceIn spite of the essential role conferred to human capital by endogenous growth...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
Abstract. Recent empirical studies question the conventional wisdom on the importance of education f...
In a seminal article, Hanushek and Woessmann explained economic growth as a function of the quality ...
We study the relationship between human capital and growth using a model which encompasses previous ...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
This paper explains why different studies present widely-varying estimates of the effect of increase...
There are strong reasons why education can help promote economic growth that do not always bear out ...
There are strong reasons why education can help promote economic growth that do not always bear out ...
Much has been written in the economic literature about the theoretical and empirical effects of scho...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical investigation of the relationship between human capi...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical investigation of the relationship between human capi...
We investigate why the economics literature often finds a negative relationship between increased s...
International audienceIn spite of the essential role conferred to human capital by endogenous growth...
International audienceIn spite of the essential role conferred to human capital by endogenous growth...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
Abstract. Recent empirical studies question the conventional wisdom on the importance of education f...
In a seminal article, Hanushek and Woessmann explained economic growth as a function of the quality ...
We study the relationship between human capital and growth using a model which encompasses previous ...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...
This paper attempts to reconcile the mismatch between theoretical models and empirical results in ad...