Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Looking for the right human capital proxy Cover
By: Rudolf Kubík  
Open Access
|Oct 2010

References

  1. AARONSON, D., SULLIVAN, D. (2001). Growth in Worker Quality, Economic Perspectives. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago: Chicago
  2. AGHION, P., HOWITT, P. (1998). Endogenous growth theory. Boston: MIT.
  3. ARNOLD, J., BASSANINI, A., SCARPETTA, S. (2007). Solow or Lucas? Testing growth models using panel data from OECD countries. OECD Economic department, OECD economic studies. WP 59210.2139/ssrn.1095213
  4. BARRO, R., SALA-I-MARTIN, X. (2004). Economic Growth. Boston: MIT.
  5. BARRO, R., LEE, J.W. (2000). International data on educational attainment: Updates and implications. Center for international development at Harvard University: Harvard Working paper 42, 2000.
  6. BENHABIB, J., SPIEGEL, M.M. (1994). The Role of Human Capital in Economic Development: Evidence from Aggregate Cross-country Data. Journal of Monetary Economics. 34(2), Pp. 143-173.10.1016/0304-3932(94)90047-7
  7. BILS, M., KLENOW, P. (2000). Does schooling cause growth? American economic review. 90(5). Pp. 1160-83.
  8. COHEN, D., SOTO, M. (2007). Growth and human capital: Good data, good results. Journal of economic growth. 12(1). Pp. 51-76.10.1007/s10887-007-9011-5
  9. DE LA FUENTE, A. (2003). Human capital in a global and knowledge-based economy part II.: assessment at the EU country level. Final report. CSIC.
  10. DE LA FUENTE, A., DOMENECH, R. (2006). Human Capital in Growth Regression: How Much Difference Does Quality Data Make? Journal of the European Economic Association, 4(1). Pp. 1-36.10.1162/jeea.2006.4.1.1
  11. DENISON, E.F. (1962). The sources of economic growth in the United States and the alternatives before Us, New York.
  12. ECB. (2006). Growth in euro area labor quality. Working paper no. 575/2006. Frankfurt: ECB.
  13. HANUSHEK, E., KIMKO, D., (2000). Schooling, labor force quality, and the growth of nations. The American Economic Review 90(5), 1184-1208.10.1257/aer.90.5.1184
  14. HO, M., JORGENSON, D. (1999). The quality of the U.S. Workforce - 1948-1998. Harvard University.
  15. JORGENSON, D. GRILICHES, Z. (1968). The Explanation of Productivity Change. Review of Economic Studies 34, pp. 249-280.10.2307/2296675
  16. KRUGER, A., LINDHAL, M. (2001). Education for growth: Why and for whom? Journal for economic literature. Vol. 39(4). Pp. 1101-36.10.1257/jel.39.4.1101
  17. LOENING, J. L. (1996). Effects of primary, secondary and tertiary education on economic growth - Evidence from Guatemala. World Bank. Working paper no. 3610/1996.
  18. MINCER, J. (1974). Schooling, Earnings, and Experience. Columbia U. Press.: New York.
  19. PRICHETT, L. (2001). Where has all the education gone? World bank economic review. 15(3). Pp. 367-391.
  20. HESTON, A., SUMMERS, R., ATEN, B. (2006), Penn World Table Version 6.2, Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices at the University of Pennsylvania.
  21. SODERBOM, M. (2001). Trade and human capital as determinants of growth. University of Oxford, Working paper 10/2001.
  22. SOTO, M. (2002). Rediscovering education in growth regressions. OECD: Paris.
  23. SOTO, M. (2008). The casual effect of education on aggregate income. OECD: Barcelona.
  24. TANG, T. MacLEOD, C. (2006). Labor force ageing and productivity performance in Canada. Canadian journal of economics. Vol. 39, No. 2, 5/2006.10.1111/j.0008-4085.2006.00361.x
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10135-009-0009-0 | Journal eISSN: 1804-1663 | Journal ISSN: 1213-2446
Language: English
Page range: 61 - 70
Published on: Oct 18, 2010
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2010 Rudolf Kubík, published by Mendel University in Brno
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 10 (2010): Issue 2 (January 2010)