Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
986476 Review of Economic Dynamics 2006 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

We propose a model of schooling that can account for the observed heterogeneity in workers' productivity and educational attainment. Identical unskilled agents can get a degree at a cost, but becoming skilled entails an additional unobservable effort cost. Individual labor can then be used as an input in pairwise production matches. Two factors affect students' desire to build human capital: degrees imperfectly signal productivity, and contract imperfections generate holdup problems. Multiple stationary equilibria exist, some of which are market failures characterized by a largely educated workforce of low average skill. Policy implications are explored.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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