Cognitive Skills, Schooling Attainment, and Schooling Resources: What Drives Economic Growth?
This paper presents evidence that students’ test scores at ages 9 to 15 are not a good proxy for a nation’s stock of human capital. Across countries test scores rise with increases in human capital up to $40,000/adult (2000$), but then decline as human capital increases up to $125,000/adult. Schooli...
- Autores:
 - 
                   Breton, Theodore R.           
 
- Tipo de recurso:
 
- Fecha de publicación:
 - 2009
 
- Institución:
 - Universidad EAFIT
 
- Repositorio:
 - Repositorio EAFIT
 
- Idioma:
 -           eng          
 - OAI Identifier:
 - oai:repository.eafit.edu.co:10784/564
 - Acceso en línea:
 -           http://hdl.handle.net/10784/564
          
 - Palabra clave:
 -           Cognitive Skills          
Human Capital
Education
Schooling
Economic Growth
 - Rights
 - License
 - Acceso abierto
 
| Summary: | This paper presents evidence that students’ test scores at ages 9 to 15 are not a good proxy for a nation’s stock of human capital. Across countries test scores rise with increases in human capital up to $40,000/adult (2000$), but then decline as human capital increases up to $125,000/adult. Schooling attainment is a better proxy for the human capital stock than test scores, but it is not very useful for statistical analysis because it is not a precise measure. The nation’s stock of human capital, calculated from cumulative investment in schooling, is the schooling measure most correlated with national income. | 
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