Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- List of conference participants
- 1 Ageing and the European labour market: public policy issues
- 2 Ageing and European economic demography
- 3 Ageing and employment trends: a comparative analysis for OECD countries
- 4 Ageing and the labour market in Poland and Eastern Europe
- 5 The implications of cohort size for human capital investment
- 6 Does an ageing labour force call for large adjustments in training or wage policies?
- 7 On ageing and earnings
- 8 Age, wages and education in The Netherlands
- 9 Ageing and unemployment
- 10 Ageing, migration and labour mobility
- Index
5 - The implications of cohort size for human capital investment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- List of conference participants
- 1 Ageing and the European labour market: public policy issues
- 2 Ageing and European economic demography
- 3 Ageing and employment trends: a comparative analysis for OECD countries
- 4 Ageing and the labour market in Poland and Eastern Europe
- 5 The implications of cohort size for human capital investment
- 6 Does an ageing labour force call for large adjustments in training or wage policies?
- 7 On ageing and earnings
- 8 Age, wages and education in The Netherlands
- 9 Ageing and unemployment
- 10 Ageing, migration and labour mobility
- Index
Summary
Introduction
As the labour force ages in many of the most highly industrialized countries of the world, it is natural to consider the effects of these shifts in the age distribution of the labour force on aggregate productivity and the intergenerational distribution of wealth. In this paper and a companion paper (Flinn, 1991), we attempt to more precisely characterize the manner in which the age distribution of an economy determines the level of investment in human capital and the wealth distribution. In Flinn (1991), our focus of interest was cohort-specific investment in formal schooling. In this paper, we turn our attention to the issue of investment in general human capital on the job.
There is a large, primarily theoretical literature on human capital investment on the job; modern general statements of the theory and some empirical implications which follow from restricted versions of it can be found in Becker (1975) and Mincer (1974), for example. Human capital investment in our model will take place within an overlapping generations economy in which the process generating the cohort size sequence is unrestricted. Our focus on the effect of the cohort size sequence on human capital investment patterns was also the focus of Dooley and Gottschalk (1984), though our analysis is at the same time more ambitious in the sense of being cast in a partial equilibrium framework and less ambitious in the sense that our empirical analysis is extremely limited and makes no attempt to account for within (birth) cohort variance in human capital investment or earnings.
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- Labour Markets in an Ageing Europe , pp. 98 - 125Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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