Performance decline in a low-stakes test at age 15 and educational attainment at age 25: Cross-country longitudinal evidence

2021 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 114-125
Author(s):  
F. Borgonovi ◽  
A. Ferrara ◽  
M. Piacentini
Author(s):  
G. Monusova

Educational attainment and vocational training are important components of the human capital and they both show large cross-country variation. Large differences in vocational training between countries have two major interconnected explanations. The first one deals with structural differences in technological structure of labour demand, while the second one associates incidence of on-the-job training with institutional environment fertile for high tech developments.


2001 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 1101-1136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan B Krueger ◽  
Mikael Lindahl

This paper summarizes and tries to reconcile evidence from the microeconometric and empirical macro growth literatures on the effect of schooling on income and GDP growth. Much microeconometric evidence suggests that education is an important causal determinant of income for individuals within countries. At a national level, however, recent studies have found that increases in educational attainment are unrelated to economic growth. This discrepancy appears to be a result of the high rate of measurement error in first-differenced cross-country education data. After accounting for measurement error, the effect of changes in educational attainment on income growth in cross-country data is at least as great as microeconometric estimates of the rate of return to years of schooling. Another finding of the macro growth literature—that economic growth depends positively on the initial stock of human capital—is not robust when the assumption of a constant-coefficient model is relaxed.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Patterson ◽  
William A. Gentry ◽  
Sarah A. Stawiski ◽  
David C. Gilmore

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