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Long-Term Consequences of Natural Resource Booms for Human Capital Accumulation
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Emery, J.C. Herbert (Author)
- Ferrer, Ana (Author)
- Green, David (Author)
Title
Long-Term Consequences of Natural Resource Booms for Human Capital Accumulation
Abstract
Tight labor markets driven by resource booms could increase the opportunity cost of schooling and crowd out human capital formation. For oil-producing economies such as the Province of Alberta, the OPEC oil shocks during the period from 1973 to 1981 may have had an adverse long-term effect on the productivity of the labor force if the oil boom resulted in workers reducing their ultimate investment in human capital rather than merely altering the timing of schooling. The authors analyze the effect of this decade-long oil boom on the long-term human capital investments and productivity for Alberta birth cohorts that were of normal schooling ages before, during, and after the oil boom. Their findings suggest that resource booms may change the timing of schooling but they do not reduce the total accumulation of human capital.
Publication
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Volume
65
Issue
3
Pages
708-734
Date
2012
Language
English
ISSN
0019-7939
Accessed
8/3/18, 8:53 PM
Citation
Emery, J. C. H., Ferrer, A., & Green, D. (2012). Long-Term Consequences of Natural Resource Booms for Human Capital Accumulation. Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 65(3), 708–734. https://economics.ubc.ca/files/2013/05/pdf_paper_david-green-long-term-consequences-natural.pdf
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