Human Capital and Employment Risks Diversification
Pascal St-Amour
No 15-18, Swiss Finance Institute Research Paper Series from Swiss Finance Institute
Abstract:
Both educational expenditures and attainment have increased sharply over the last decades, despite rising prices of education, and stagnating income returns to human capital. This paper emphasizes conditional employment risks diversification as additional motivation for education demand. Job risk protection through education is strongly evidenced in the data, yet is absent from the Human Capital (HC) literature, whereas dynamic HC choices by agents are not considered in standard unemployment Search and Matching models. A benchmark HC model is thus modified to allow for lower job displacement risk, and higher re-employment probability, in addition to higher income for the better educated. Numerical solutions for optimal dynamic investment in human capital are consistent with observed patterns, such as unemployment duration dependence (stigma), post-re-employment income loss (scarring), and cyclical co-movements in education expenditures. The effects of permanent shifts affecting human capital returns in employment risks diversification, and income returns are investigated and shown to be consistent with rising educational expenditures and attainment.
Keywords: Demand for education; unemployment duration dependence; unemployment stigma; income scarring; work displacement; re-employment probability (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I26 J24 J64 J65 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 55 pages
Date: 2015-04, Revised 2015-06
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:chf:rpseri:rp1518
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