On the Industry Specificity of Human Capital and Business Cycles

Publication date

2016-05-30T07:39:56Z

2016-05-30T07:39:56Z

2016

2016-05-30T07:40:01Z

Abstract

We define specific -general- human capital as the set of occupations whose use is spread in a limited -wide- set of industries. Using the EU Labor Force Survey database, we identify these human capital types and analyze their employment and education. This exercise yields a persistent assignment of occupations into specific and general human capital types. The share of specific human capital varies across countries and has declined over time almost everywhere. We consider a stylized two-sector model where one of the sectors uses both types of human capital and the other specializes on general human capital. We show that a mean preserving increase in the share of specific human capital reduces -increases- the contribution of shocks in non-specialized sector and increases -reduces- the contribution of shocks in specialized sector to the variance of final output, when sectoral outputs are gross complements -substitutes-

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

Publisher

Universitat de Barcelona. Facultat d'Economia i Empresa

Related items

UB Economics – Working Papers, 2016, E16/335

[WP E-Eco16/335]

Recommended citation

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Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Jerbashian et al., 2016

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

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