Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems
Recent empirical studies question conventional wisdom about the importance of education to growth. These results partly reflect how international differences in the quality of education systems--defined by the systems' ability to produce one m...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490187/human-capital-growth-recovered-role-education-systems http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19583 |
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okr-10986-195832021-04-23T14:03:43Z Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems Dessus, Sebastien AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY AVERAGE SHARE CAPITA INCOME GROWTH CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL STOCK CONDITIONAL CONVERGENCE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM CONVERGENCE DEBATE CONVERGENCE EQUATIONS CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS COUNTRY DATA COUNTRY- SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS COVARIANCE MATRIX CROSS-COUNTRY DATA CROSS-SECTIONAL DATA DATA SET DEPENDENT VARIABLE DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DYNAMIC EQUATIONS ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC REVIEW ECONOMIC THEORIES ECONOMICS EDUCATION LEVEL EDUCATION SYSTEMS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ELASTICITY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPIRICAL STUDIES EMPLOYMENT EQUATIONS ENDOGENOUS GROWTH ENDOGENOUS VARIABLE ESTIMATED COEFFICIENT ESTIMATED ELASTICITY ESTIMATION METHOD EXOGENOUS VARIABLE EXOGENOUS VARIABLES EXTERNALITY FIXED EFFECTS GDP GINI INDEX GROWTH DETERMINANTS GROWTH EMPIRICS GROWTH MODEL GROWTH MODELS GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HIGH COST HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION INCOME INCOME CONVERGENCE INCOME GROWTH INCOME GROWTH RATE INEQUALITY INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INVESTMENT RATE LABOR FORCE LONG RUN LONG-RUN GROWTH MARGINAL PRODUCTIVITY MARKET IMPERFECTIONS MEASUREMENT ERROR MONETARY ECONOMICS NEGATIVE RELATIONSHIP NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH MODELS NETWORK EXTERNALITIES 0 HYPOTHESIS PER CAPITA GROWTH PER CAPITA INCOME PER CAPITA INCOMES PHYSICAL CAPITAL POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION GROWTH POSITIVE EFFECT POSITIVE EFFECTS POSITIVE IMPACT POVERTY TRAPS PRIMARY EDUCATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PURCHASING POWER RAPID INCREASE RENT SEEKING SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS SIGNIFICANT IMPACT SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL MARGINAL COST STANDARD DEVIATION TECHNICAL PROGRESS UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION Recent empirical studies question conventional wisdom about the importance of education to growth. These results partly reflect how international differences in the quality of education systems--defined by the systems' ability to produce one marginal unit of productive human capital--are not taken into account. The author estimates neoclassical growth models on panel data in which the elasticity of human capital depends stochastically on different characteristics of the education system. Among characteristics that explain differences in quality are education infrastructure, the initial endowment of human capital, and the ability to distribute educational services equally among potential students. Giving priority to primary education for all rather than secondary education to a few is more likely to foster growth (for the same fiscal burden). But parallel actions are also probably needed--for example, promoting institutions that motivate skilled workers to spend time on growth-promoting activities and encouraging the inflow of foreign technologies to maximize the social return to public investment in education. 2014-08-21T19:02:40Z 2014-08-21T19:02:40Z 2001-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490187/human-capital-growth-recovered-role-education-systems http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19583 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2632 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY AVERAGE SHARE CAPITA INCOME GROWTH CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL STOCK CONDITIONAL CONVERGENCE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM CONVERGENCE DEBATE CONVERGENCE EQUATIONS CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS COUNTRY DATA COUNTRY- SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS COVARIANCE MATRIX CROSS-COUNTRY DATA CROSS-SECTIONAL DATA DATA SET DEPENDENT VARIABLE DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DYNAMIC EQUATIONS ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC REVIEW ECONOMIC THEORIES ECONOMICS EDUCATION LEVEL EDUCATION SYSTEMS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ELASTICITY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPIRICAL STUDIES EMPLOYMENT EQUATIONS ENDOGENOUS GROWTH ENDOGENOUS VARIABLE ESTIMATED COEFFICIENT ESTIMATED ELASTICITY ESTIMATION METHOD EXOGENOUS VARIABLE EXOGENOUS VARIABLES EXTERNALITY FIXED EFFECTS GDP GINI INDEX GROWTH DETERMINANTS GROWTH EMPIRICS GROWTH MODEL GROWTH MODELS GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HIGH COST HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION INCOME INCOME CONVERGENCE INCOME GROWTH INCOME GROWTH RATE INEQUALITY INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INVESTMENT RATE LABOR FORCE LONG RUN LONG-RUN GROWTH MARGINAL PRODUCTIVITY MARKET IMPERFECTIONS MEASUREMENT ERROR MONETARY ECONOMICS NEGATIVE RELATIONSHIP NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH MODELS NETWORK EXTERNALITIES 0 HYPOTHESIS PER CAPITA GROWTH PER CAPITA INCOME PER CAPITA INCOMES PHYSICAL CAPITAL POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION GROWTH POSITIVE EFFECT POSITIVE EFFECTS POSITIVE IMPACT POVERTY TRAPS PRIMARY EDUCATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PURCHASING POWER RAPID INCREASE RENT SEEKING SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS SIGNIFICANT IMPACT SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL MARGINAL COST STANDARD DEVIATION TECHNICAL PROGRESS UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION |
spellingShingle |
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY AVERAGE SHARE CAPITA INCOME GROWTH CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL STOCK CONDITIONAL CONVERGENCE CONVENTIONAL WISDOM CONVERGENCE DEBATE CONVERGENCE EQUATIONS CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS COUNTRY DATA COUNTRY- SPECIFIC CHARACTERISTICS COVARIANCE MATRIX CROSS-COUNTRY DATA CROSS-SECTIONAL DATA DATA SET DEPENDENT VARIABLE DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DYNAMIC EQUATIONS ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC REVIEW ECONOMIC THEORIES ECONOMICS EDUCATION LEVEL EDUCATION SYSTEMS EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ELASTICITY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPIRICAL STUDIES EMPLOYMENT EQUATIONS ENDOGENOUS GROWTH ENDOGENOUS VARIABLE ESTIMATED COEFFICIENT ESTIMATED ELASTICITY ESTIMATION METHOD EXOGENOUS VARIABLE EXOGENOUS VARIABLES EXTERNALITY FIXED EFFECTS GDP GINI INDEX GROWTH DETERMINANTS GROWTH EMPIRICS GROWTH MODEL GROWTH MODELS GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HIGH COST HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION INCOME INCOME CONVERGENCE INCOME GROWTH INCOME GROWTH RATE INEQUALITY INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INVESTMENT RATE LABOR FORCE LONG RUN LONG-RUN GROWTH MARGINAL PRODUCTIVITY MARKET IMPERFECTIONS MEASUREMENT ERROR MONETARY ECONOMICS NEGATIVE RELATIONSHIP NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH NEOCLASSICAL GROWTH MODELS NETWORK EXTERNALITIES 0 HYPOTHESIS PER CAPITA GROWTH PER CAPITA INCOME PER CAPITA INCOMES PHYSICAL CAPITAL POLICY RESEARCH POPULATION GROWTH POSITIVE EFFECT POSITIVE EFFECTS POSITIVE IMPACT POVERTY TRAPS PRIMARY EDUCATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PURCHASING POWER RAPID INCREASE RENT SEEKING SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS SIGNIFICANT IMPACT SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL MARGINAL COST STANDARD DEVIATION TECHNICAL PROGRESS UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION Dessus, Sebastien Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2632 |
description |
Recent empirical studies question
conventional wisdom about the importance of education to
growth. These results partly reflect how international
differences in the quality of education systems--defined by
the systems' ability to produce one marginal unit of
productive human capital--are not taken into account. The
author estimates neoclassical growth models on panel data in
which the elasticity of human capital depends stochastically
on different characteristics of the education system. Among
characteristics that explain differences in quality are
education infrastructure, the initial endowment of human
capital, and the ability to distribute educational services
equally among potential students. Giving priority to primary
education for all rather than secondary education to a few
is more likely to foster growth (for the same fiscal
burden). But parallel actions are also probably needed--for
example, promoting institutions that motivate skilled
workers to spend time on growth-promoting activities and
encouraging the inflow of foreign technologies to maximize
the social return to public investment in education. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Dessus, Sebastien |
author_facet |
Dessus, Sebastien |
author_sort |
Dessus, Sebastien |
title |
Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
title_short |
Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
title_full |
Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
title_fullStr |
Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
title_full_unstemmed |
Human Capital and Growth : The Recovered Role of Education Systems |
title_sort |
human capital and growth : the recovered role of education systems |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490187/human-capital-growth-recovered-role-education-systems http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19583 |
_version_ |
1764440082667798528 |