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Showing 46 to 60 of 102 results Save | Export
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Aslam, Monazza; Bari, Faisal; Kingdon, Geeta – Education Economics, 2012
This study investigates the economic outcomes of education for wage earners in Pakistan. This is done by analysing the relationship between schooling, cognitive skills and ability, on the one hand, and economic activity, occupation, sectoral choice and earnings, on the other. In Pakistan, an important question remains largely unaddressed: what…
Descriptors: Productivity, Credentials, Human Capital, Outcomes of Education
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Benos, Nikos – Education Economics, 2010
The present paper studies the general equilibrium implications of two types of education policy in an overlapping generations model. We examine education transfers, which augment inherited private education spending, and public investment on economy-wide human capital, which provides externalities to individual human capital accumulation. The…
Descriptors: Private Education, Human Capital, Tax Rates, Public Policy
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Prieto-Rodriguez, Juan; Barros, Carlos Pestana; Vieira, Jose A. C. – Education Economics, 2008
This paper seeks to analyse the relationship between wages and education at a European level, using a quantile regression in order to be able to extend the study along the whole wage distribution. This analysis is carried out for a sample of 14 European countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy,…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Regression (Statistics), Foreign Countries, Educational Attainment
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Canton, Erik; Blom, Andreas – Education Economics, 2010
Financial aid to students in tertiary education can contribute to human capital accumulation through two channels: increased enrollment and improved student performance. We pay particular attention to the latter channel, and study its quantitative importance in the context of a student support program from the Sociedad de Fomento a la Educacion…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Private Colleges, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries
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Mamoon, Dawood; Murshed, S. Mansoob – Education Economics, 2009
The purpose of this paper is to compare the role of human capital accumulation measured by number of years of schooling with the relative contribution of institutional capacity to prosperity. We employ several concepts of institutional quality prevalent in the literature. We discover that developing human capital is as important as superior…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Human Capital, Educational Attainment, Educational Status Comparison
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Hanushek, Eric A. – Education Economics, 2009
Concentration on school attainment goals without close attention to school quality has hurt developing countries. Recent evidence shows that individual incomes, the distribution of income, and economic growth rates are all closely related to the cognitive skills of the population. While direct evidence from developing countries is thin, the…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Human Capital, Teacher Effectiveness, Foreign Countries
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Rubb, Stephen – Education Economics, 2006
Using a human capital theory framework, this study examines the impact of educational mismatches on earnings and occupational mobility. Occupational mobility theory suggests that overeducated workers observe greater upward occupational mobility and undereducated workers observe lower upward occupational mobility. By extension, this leads to…
Descriptors: Income, Occupational Mobility, Human Capital, Educational Attainment
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Kriechel, Ben; Pfann, Gerard A. – Education Economics, 2005
Displaced workers experience significant and long-lasting wage losses. However, the average wage losses hide the tremendous differences among workers. So far, the differences are explained by differences in accumulated on-the-job experience, education level, age, and so on, but a large variation among similar workers remain. In this paper we…
Descriptors: Wages, Dislocated Workers, Human Capital, Labor Market
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Vandenberghe, V.; Debande, O. – Education Economics, 2007
This paper is a numerical exploration of the following. Assume, in the European Union context, that decision-makers want to spend more on higher education via higher tuition fees, but also want payments to be deferred and income-contingent. There are several possible ways to achieve this. First, ask graduates to repay a fixed amount each year if…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Income, Labor Market
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Gerard, Marcel – Education Economics, 2007
In an integrated set of jurisdictions, where residents of one country may obtain higher education in another country and later return home (with some probability), the question arises of which country has to pay for higher education abroad - the country of origin of the student, which is likely to benefit from the education acquired abroad, or the…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Higher Education, Human Capital, Foreign Countries
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Hartog, Joop; Van Ophem, Hans; Bajdechi, Simona Maria – Education Economics, 2007
The risk of investment in schooling has largely been ignored. We mimic the investment decision facing a student and simulate risky earnings profiles in alternative options, with parameters taken from the very limited evidence. The distribution of rates of return appears positively skewed. Our best estimate of "ex ante" risk in university education…
Descriptors: Parent Background, Human Capital, Educational Attainment, Risk
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Bosworth, Derek; Jones, Paul; Wilson, Rob – Education Economics, 2008
Globalization is putting increasing pressure on jobs in the United Kingdom, particularly among less skilled activities. The European response through the Lisbon Strategy has been diffuse, while UK policy appears much more focused, concentrating on the need to raise education and skill levels. The present paper examines the transition towards a…
Descriptors: Employment Qualifications, Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
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Schultz, Theodore W. – Education Economics, 1993
Human capital invests in new forms of physical capital, hence, human capital is key to economic progress. Lists eight attributes of human capital; for example, human capital cannot be separated from person who has it, and human capital is not visible. Human capital is necessary component when attempting to improve a person's income and welfare in…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Capital, Human Resources
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Abbott, Malcolm; Doucouliagos, Hristos – Education Economics, 2004
Research plays an important role in underpinning a country's economic and social life. Universities are at the centre of the research and human capital generating process. The aim of this paper is to explore the links between research output, research income, academic and non-academic labour and some of the characteristics of Australian…
Descriptors: Social Life, Income, Human Capital, College Faculty
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Semeijn, Judith; van der Velden, Rolf; Heijke, Hans; van der Vleuten, Cees; Boshuizen, Henny – Education Economics, 2005
In this study, we explore the role of education in explaining the labour market outcomes for a sample of graduates in medicine. More specifically, the following research question is answered: To what extent are labour market outcomes of physicians explained by the skills acquired in education, as indicated in the theory of human capital, or by…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Physicians, Medical Education, Labor Market
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