Workers' Education, Spillovers, and Productivity: Evidence from Plant-Level Production Functions
National Bureau of Economic Research
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Abstract
I assess the magnitude of human capital spillovers by estimating production functions using a unique firm-worker matched data set. Productivity of plants in cities that experience large increases in the share of college graduates rises more than the productivity of similar plants in cities that experience small increases in the share of college graduates. These productivity gains are offset by increased labor costs. Using three alternative measures of economic distance—input-output flows, technological specialization, and patent citations—I find that within a city, spillovers between industries that are economically close are larger than spillovers between industries that are economically distant.
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1,094
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Productivity
- Economics
- Human capital
- Offset (computer science)
- Production (economics)
- Labour economics
- Economic growth
- Microeconomics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Decent work and economic growth
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