We investigate why the economics literature often finds a negative relationship between increased schooling and GDP growth over short periods. We show that increases in GDP in 98 countries during five-year intervals are correlated with the increases in adults´ average schooling during the prior 40 years. We find that an additional year of schooling of the work force raised GDP by 7% on average during 1980-2005, but its initial effect on GDP was much smaller. The delayed effect of increased schooling on national productivity explains why recent increases in schooling cannot explain near-term increases in GDP
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...
Empirical studies assume that the macro Mincer return on schooling is con- stant across countries. U...
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...
Using a data set for a panel of 118 countries, this paper shows that changes in the level of educati...
Using a data set for a panel of 118 countries, this paper shows that changes in the level of educati...
Education plays an important role in a country’s economic growth. This paper looks at the impact of ...
Using a new data set for human capital/adult, I show that changes in human capital cause economic gr...
This paper explains why different studies present widely-varying estimates of the effect of increase...
Does education expenditure promote long-run economic growth? Empirical evidence is inconclusive. Thi...
I use a dynamic augmented Solow model to estimate the effects of students’ test scores and investmen...
This study investigates the relationship between government expenditure in education and growth meas...
This paper challenges Hanushek and Woessmann’s [2008] contention that the quality and not the quanti...
In a seminal article, Hanushek and Woessmann explained economic growth as a function of the quality ...
Este documento explica por qué diferentes estudios presentan ampliamente diferentes estimaciones sob...
A number of economists find that growth and schooling are highly correlated across countries. A mode...
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...
Empirical studies assume that the macro Mincer return on schooling is con- stant across countries. U...
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...
Using a data set for a panel of 118 countries, this paper shows that changes in the level of educati...
Using a data set for a panel of 118 countries, this paper shows that changes in the level of educati...
Education plays an important role in a country’s economic growth. This paper looks at the impact of ...
Using a new data set for human capital/adult, I show that changes in human capital cause economic gr...
This paper explains why different studies present widely-varying estimates of the effect of increase...
Does education expenditure promote long-run economic growth? Empirical evidence is inconclusive. Thi...
I use a dynamic augmented Solow model to estimate the effects of students’ test scores and investmen...
This study investigates the relationship between government expenditure in education and growth meas...
This paper challenges Hanushek and Woessmann’s [2008] contention that the quality and not the quanti...
In a seminal article, Hanushek and Woessmann explained economic growth as a function of the quality ...
Este documento explica por qué diferentes estudios presentan ampliamente diferentes estimaciones sob...
A number of economists find that growth and schooling are highly correlated across countries. A mode...
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...
Empirical studies assume that the macro Mincer return on schooling is con- stant across countries. U...
A surprising cross country stylized fact is that a higher public spending on education tends to lowe...