Human Resource Investment and Early-Stage Career Choice: Evaluating Work–Life Income Paths in 21st-Century Canada

Author:

Anderson Gordon1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada

Abstract

Of necessity, people make many investment decisions regarding their human resource stock early in their life cycle, long before outcomes predicated upon those choices are realized. Different choices involve very different initial effort and financing outlays and issues arise as to how these alternative paths can be compared and evaluated. Here, techniques for the cardinal comparison of human resource contingent work–life-cycle income value profiles under alternative income valuation function assumptions are outlined and instruments for examining potential ambiguities in comparison developed. All are applied in an analysis of the impact of different levels of investment of human resources in 21st-century Canada. The results, with one notable exception (the choice for boys between a trade or a bachelor-level degree), indicate unambiguous life-cycle benefits to higher levels of human resource stock investment for both girls and boys. Within gender, best–worst relative magnitudes are increasing over time for both genders but more so for girls. Boys are enjoying a universal but diminishing premium over time, reflective of male–female income convergence.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Finance,Economics and Econometrics,Accounting,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)

Reference30 articles.

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3. Somewhere Between Utopia and Dystopia: Choosing from Multiple Incomparable Prospects;Anderson;Journal of Business and Economic Statistics,2020

4. Consistent Tests for Stochastic Dominance;Barrett;Econometrica,2003

5. Education and the Distribution of Earnings;Becker;American Economic Review,1966

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