Investment in humans, technological diffusion and economic growth
Richard R. Nelson,Edmund S. Phelps +1 more
- 01 Dec 1965
- pp 133-139
TL;DR: Most economic theorists have embraced the principle that education enhances one's ability to receive, decode, and understand information, and that information processing and interpretation is important for performing or learning to perform many jobs as discussed by the authors.
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Abstract: Most economic theorists have embraced the principle that certain kinds of education—the three R's, vocational training, and higher education—equip a man to perform certain jobs or functions, or enable a man to perform a given function more effectively. The principle seems a sound one. Underlying it, perhaps, is the theory that education enhances one's ability to receive, decode, and understand information, and that information processing and interpretation is important for performing or learning to perform many jobs. This chapter focuses on the economic growth theory, which has concentrated on the role of education as it relates to the completely routinized job. In its usual, rather general form, the theory postulates a production function which states how maximum current output depends upon the current services of tangible capital goods, the current number of men performing each of these jobs, the current educational attainments of each of these jobholders and time.
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Citations
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Interaction Between Endogenous Human Capital and Technological Change
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The dual nature of trade: measuring its impact on imitation and growth
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified spillovers from high technology imports to domestic imitation and innovation in developed and developing countries, and then considered the contribution of foreign and domestic innovation to growth in per capita GDP.
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