From Physical to Human Capital Accumulation: Inequality and the Process of Development

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4663336


DOI10.1111/0034-6527.00312zbMath1103.91390WikidataQ61893692 ScholiaQ61893692MaRDI QIDQ4663336

Oded Galor, Omer Moav

Publication date: 30 March 2005

Published in: Review of Economic Studies (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/0034-6527.00312


91B62: Economic growth models


Related Items

Growth and inequality: dependence on the time path of productivity increases (and other structural changes), A credit market in early stages of economic development, Growth, sectoral composition, and the evolution of income levels, Income distribution and macroeconomics: fertility adjustment prior to education investment, Pacifying monogamy, Nonlinearities in capital-skill complementarity, Institutions and development: the interaction between trade regime and political system, Does the profile of income inequality matter for economic growth?, Creditor protection and the dynamics of the distribution in oligarchic societies, The rise in returns to education and the decline in household savings, Growth, distance to frontier and composition of human capital, Why England? Demographic factors, structural change and physical capital accumulation during the industrial revolution, Solution algorithm to a class of monetary rational equilibrium macromodels with optimal monetary policy design, Growth and distribution in an AK-model with endogenous impatience, Education, corruption, and the distribution of income, The price of education and inequality, A population-macroeconomic growth model for currently developing countries, Human capital accumulation, fertility and economic development, The law of primogeniture and the transition from landed aristocracy to industrial democracy, Escaping high mortality, Finance, inequality and the poor, New Technology, Human Capital, and Growth in a Developing Country, INEQUALITY, GROWTH, AND OVERTAKING, SECTORAL SHIFT, WEALTH DISTRIBUTION, AND DEVELOPMENT, A Theory of Medical Effectiveness, Differential Mortality, Income Inequality and Growth for Pre-Industrial England