Cardiff University | Prifysgol Caerdydd ORCA
Online Research @ Cardiff 
WelshClear Cookie - decide language by browser settings

Three essays on human capital and business cycles

Dang, Jing 2010. Three essays on human capital and business cycles. PhD Thesis, Cardiff University.

[thumbnail of U584485.pdf] PDF - Accepted Post-Print Version
Download (5MB)

Abstract

This thesis contains four independent chapters with all of them emphasizing the role of purposeful human capital accumulation in affecting short-run economic dynamics. Four chapters jointly are aimed to deliver two key messages: first, human capital investment is an important channel to propagate business cycle shocks second, accounting for human capital investment decision appropriately solves two consumption puzzles ("excess sensitivity" and "excess smoothness") simultaneously. The tool used to achieve these goals is an extended version of the Uzawa-Lucas two-sector endogenous growth model. Specifically, the first chapter shows that modelling human capital formation explicitly in a business cycle framework gives rise to a strong internal propagation mechanism such that output growth is positively autocorrelated in short horizons and output has a hump-shaped impulse response. The second chapter shows that if human capital investment is counted as part of measured output (not the case in the chapter 1), the endogenous growth model in this thesis is also able to replicate the observed output dynamics via a different mechanism. The third chapter shows that taking into account people's human capital investment decision is able to reconcile the "excess sensitivity" of consumption with permanent income hypothesis. The last chapter shows that a reasonable degree of elasticity of intertemporal substitution is able to explain consumption smoothness when income process is nonstationary.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Status: Unpublished
Schools: Business (Including Economics)
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HB Economic Theory
ISBN: 9781303195723
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 30 March 2016
Last Modified: 19 Mar 2016 23:29
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/54384

Actions (repository staff only)

Edit Item Edit Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics