2019
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3403884
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Demographic Change, Human Capital, and Economic Growth in Korea

Abstract: In this study, we construct a measure of human capital using micro datasets on labor composition of age, gender, education, and wage rate and analyze its role in economic growth for the Korean economy. Over the past three decades, human capital has grown steadily at about 1% per year, contrasting to a continuously declining trend of total workhours. This growth has been driven by the rise of better-educated baby boom cohorts. A growth accounting exercise shows that human capital contributes significantly to ec… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…There is overwhelming evidence in support of the growing impact of human capital from the various human capital indicators considered. This conforms with earlier studies (e.g., Lucas, 1988; Mauro, 1995) and current studies (e.g., Chen & Fang, 2018; Han & Lee, 2020; Teixeira & Queirós, 2016). This is not shocking because when human capital is efficient and sufficient, innovation and productivity will increase in the economy, thereby creating a direct impact on economic growth.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 94%
“…There is overwhelming evidence in support of the growing impact of human capital from the various human capital indicators considered. This conforms with earlier studies (e.g., Lucas, 1988; Mauro, 1995) and current studies (e.g., Chen & Fang, 2018; Han & Lee, 2020; Teixeira & Queirós, 2016). This is not shocking because when human capital is efficient and sufficient, innovation and productivity will increase in the economy, thereby creating a direct impact on economic growth.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 94%
“…Efficient financial infrastructure minimises financial intermediation costs and ensures efficient allocation of resources (Xu & Tan, 2020). Finally, human capital, as the measure of social infrastructure development, guarantees the availability of skilled and highly productive labour that contributes to economic growth (Han & Lee, 2020;Ogundari & Awokuse, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, a new estimation formula based on new demographics will be needed. 32 In addition, the ageing process and underlying diseases can falsely reduce FEV1 values due to respiratory muscle weakness, but the FEV1/FVC ratio was not affected by those confounders. 33 Therefore, for a population with a low prevalence of airway obstruction, including this cohort, the FEV1/FVC ratio may be a more suitable index for predicting incident CKD than absolute FEV1 values.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%