Distributional Effects of Human Capital in Advanced Economies: Dynamics of Economic Globalization
Abstract
This study investigates the human capital-income inequality nexus for 19
advanced economies. The whole sample covers the period between 1990 and 2017. The
econometric analysis considers two fundamental panel data methods, namely the fixedeffects and two-step system GMM, to test whether the correlation between human
capital development and income inequality is negative or not. The empirical findings of
these two particular panel data methods reveal that while the initial stages of
accumulating a higher degree of human capital through increasing the average years
of schooling and returns to education reduce the level of income inequality, the later
stages show that this negative relationship turns into positive by way of widening the
unequal distribution of national income. In addition, the economic globalization appears
to be positively correlated with income inequality, meaning that globalized economic
relations widen the scale of inequality where the statistical significance of human
capital-income inequality nexus still prevails. All these estimation results show that they
are contradicted with the mainstream findings, each of which puts forward that higher
level of human capital reduces the level of income inequality.
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