1,251 research outputs found

    Human Capital and Macroeconomic Growth: Austria and Germany 1960-1997. An Update

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    In an influential paper Mankiw, Romer, and Weil (1992) argue that the evidence on the international disparity in levels of per capita income and rates of growth is consistent with a standard Solow model, once it has been augmented to include human capital as an accumulable factor. In a study on Austria and Germany we augment the Solow model to allow for the accumulation of human capital. Based on a perpetual inventory estimation procedure we construct an aggregate measure of the stock of human capital of Austria and Germany by weighting workers of different schooling levels with their respective wage income. We obtain an estimate of the wage income of workers with different schooling from a Mincer type wage equation which quantifies how wages change with years of schooling. We find that the time series evidence on Austria and Germany is not consistent with a human capital augmented Solow model. Factor accumulation (broadly defined to include human capital) appears to be less (and not more) able to account for the cross-country growth performance of Austria and Germany when human capital accumulation is included in the analysis. Our results indicate that differences in technology are a driving factor in understanding cross country growth between these two neighboring countries with similar political and institutional background

    Human Capital and Macroeconomic Growth: Austria and Germany 1960-1997 - An Update

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    In an influential paper Mankiw, Romer, and Weil (1992) argue that the evidence on the international disparity in per-capita income levels and growth rates is consistent with a standard Solow model, once it has been augmented to include human capital as an accumulable factor. In a study on Austria and Germany we augment the Solow model to allow for the accumulation of human capital. Based on a perpetual inventory procedure we construct measures of human capital stocks. We find that the time series evidence on Austria and Germany is not consistent with a human-capital-augmented Solow model. Factor accumulation appears to be less (and not more) able to account for the cross-country growth performance of Austria and Germany when human capital accumulation is included. Our results indicate that differences in technology are a driving factor in understanding cross-country growth between these two neighboring countries with similar political and institutional background.Economic Growth, Total Factor Productivity, Human Capital, Technical Change, Growth Accounting

    Human Capital and Macroeconomic Growth: Austria and Germany 1960-1997. An Update

    Get PDF
    In an influential paper Mankiw, Romer, and Weil (1992) argue that the evidence on the international disparity in levels of per capita income and rates of growth is consistent with a standard Solow model, once it has been augmented to include human capital as an accumulable factor. In a study on Austria and Germany we augment the Solow model to allow for the accumulation of human capital. Based on a perpetual inventory estimation procedure we construct an aggregate measure of the stock of human capital of Austria and Germany by weighting workers of different schooling levels with their respective wage income. We obtain an estimate of the wage income of workers with different schooling from a Mincer type wage equation which quantifies how wages change with years of schooling. We find that the time series evidence on Austria and Germany is not consistent with a human capital augmented Solow model. Factor accumulation (broadly defined to include human capital) appears to be less (and not more) able to account for the cross-country growth performance of Austria and Germany when human capital accumulation is included in the analysis. Our results indicate that differences in technology are a driving factor in understanding cross country growth between these two neighboring countries with similar political and institutional background.Economic growth; total factor productivity; human capital; technical change; growth accounting

    Wonderwereld Ter Apel: van volksgeneeskunde tot kunstsagen

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    Public Debt and Generational Balance in Austria Lueth, Erik; Raffelhueschen, Bernd

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    Based on Austria's fiscal stance in 1995, we compute the generational accounts for currently living as well as future generations. The results reveal the existence of an enormous intergenerational imbalance in favor of currently living generations. Total public sector liabilities may be more than five times as high as the officially recorded level of public debt. Without any action, future generations would face life-time net taxes that are about 65 percent higher than the tax burden of a current newborn. If the government could fully and permanently retain the expenditure cutting and revenue raising effects of the 1996 fiscal consolidation package and the 1997 pension reform, then it might be able to significantly reduce the intergenerational liabilities. However, enacting both the recent tax reform 2000 and the reform of the family support scheme would increase again the fiscal imbalance and intergenerational inequity of fiscal policy in Austria.Fiscal policy, Social security, Public debt, Generational accounting

    Het kindje en de kat op de wieg (Kinderdijk)

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    Bartje Poep-humor in Werkendam en Nieuwendijk

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    'Dordtse' streekdracht?

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