2010
DOI: 10.1017/s1365100509090257
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Human Capital, Aggregation, and Growth

Abstract: The famous Mincer equation regressing log earnings on years of schooling is derived from a linear human capital accumulation equation at the individual level. Even if the cross-sectional Mincer equation holds at the level of individuals, it does not hold at the macro level of countries because aggregation of human capital has to take into account its vintage structure: human capital is embodied in people of different generations whose lifespan is finite. Finiteness of people's lives imposes also a limit on the… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(86 reference statements)
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“…Our aggregative model abstracts from finite lifetimes of individuals, though. Keeping this in mind, and having noted that there is no externality in equation (4), i.e., v is the individual number of social ties, we can apply the argument developed by Growiec (2010) here and demonstrate that accounting for finite lifetimes in our model would eliminate the currently discussed endogenous growth possibility. We can thus safely rule this case out from our present considerations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Our aggregative model abstracts from finite lifetimes of individuals, though. Keeping this in mind, and having noted that there is no externality in equation (4), i.e., v is the individual number of social ties, we can apply the argument developed by Growiec (2010) here and demonstrate that accounting for finite lifetimes in our model would eliminate the currently discussed endogenous growth possibility. We can thus safely rule this case out from our present considerations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Silva (2010) suggests that countries with higher-quality human capital opt for more risky projects and have higher productivity. The positive effect of human capital on nonlinear economic growth is also reinforced by others such as Growiec (2010) and Kottaridia and Stengos (2010). Walder and Nguyen (2008) study the pattern of economic development in China and Vietnam and state that ''the scale of economic enterprises and the allocation of property rights shape the social structure and influence income distribution'' (p. 251).…”
Section: Entrepreneurial Enterprisesmacromarketingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies generally find education to have a positive and significant effect on income growth rate. The growth effect comes through several channels; among which are the ability to create and absorb new technologies, improve health, increased savings and investments (especially in human capital), and the externalities effects of education (Groweic, 2010).…”
Section: Previous Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%