The Basic Theory of Human Capital LSE(伦敦政治经济学院人力资本的基本理论).pdf
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CHAPTER 1
The Basic Theory of Human Capital
1. General Issues
One of the most important ideas in labor economics is to think of the set of
marketable skills of workers as a form of capital in which workers make a variety
of investments. This perspective is important in understanding both investment
incentives, and the structure of wages and earnings.
Loosely speaking, human capital corresponds to any stock of knowledge or char-
acteristics the worker has (either innate or acquired) that contributes to his or her
“productivity”. This definition is broad, and this has both advantages and disad-
vantages. The advantages are clear: it enables us to think of not only the years
of schooling, but also of a variety of other characteristics as part of human capital
investments. These include school quality, training, attitudes towards work, etc. Us-
ing this type of reasoning, we can make some progress towards understanding some
of the differences in earnings across workers that are not accounted by schooling
differences alone.
The disadvantages are also related. At some level, we can push this notion of
human capital too far, and think of every difference in remuneration that we observe
in the labor market as due to human capital. For example, if I am paid less than
another Ph.D., that must be because I have lower “skills” in some other dimension
that’s not being measured by my years of schooling–this is the famous (or infamous)
unobserved heterogeneity issue. The presumption that all pay differences are related
to skills (even if these skills are unobserved to the economists in the standard data
sets) is not a bad place to start when we want to impose a conceptual structure on
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Lectures i
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