Public investment and human capital with segmented labour markets

Author:

Buffie Edward F1,Adam Christopher2ORCID,Zanna Luis-Felipe3,Balma Lacina4,Tessema Dawit4,Kpodar Kangni5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, Indiana University , 107 South Indiana Avenue , Bloomington, IN, USA

2. Department of International Development, University of Oxford , 3 Mansfield Road , Oxford, UK

3. Institute for Capacity Development, International Monetary Fund , 700 19th St NW , Washington, DC, USA

4. Forecasting and Research Department, African Development Bank , Avenue Joseph Anoma , Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire

5. Strategy, Policy and Review Department, International Monetary Fund , 700 19th St NW , Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

Abstract We develop a dynamic general equilibrium macroeconomic model with segmented labour markets and efficiency wages to examine how labour market structures influence the impact of human capital investment in low-income countries. For plausible calibration values, public investment in education is much more effective than infrastructure investment in promoting long-run economic development, but because investment in education affects labour productivity with a lag, policymakers face an intertemporal trade-off which depends on their social discount rate and the weight of distributional objectives in the social welfare function. We show the distortionary structure of labour markets matters in leveraging welfare gains from public investment and in shifting the optimal public investment programme further in favour of human capital, relative to the case of flex-wage full-employment labour markets.

Funder

African Development Bank

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference56 articles.

1. Inter-industrial wage differentials: evidence from Latin American ’countries;Abuhadba;Journal of Development Studies,1993

2. Not your average job: measuring farm labor in Tanzania;Arthi;Journal of Development Economics,2018

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