Working Paper

Human Capital Quality and Aggregate Income Differences: Development Accounting for U.S. States

Eric A. Hanushek, Jens Ruhose, Ludger Wößmann
CESifo, Munich, 2015

CESifo Working Paper No. 5411

Although many U.S. state policies presume that human capital is important for state economic development, there is little research linking better education to state incomes. In a complement to international studies of income differences, we investigate the extent to which quality-adjusted measures of human capital can explain within-country income differences. We develop detailed measures of state human capital based on school attainment from census micro data and on cognitive skills from state- and country-of-origin achievement tests. Partitioning current state workforces into state locals, interstate migrants, and immigrants, we adjust achievement scores for selective migration. We use the new human capital measures in development accounting analyses calibrated with standard production parameters. We find that differences in human capital account for 20-35 percent of the current variation in per-capita GDP among states, with roughly even contributions by school attainment and cognitive skills. Similar results emerge from growth accounting analyses.

CESifo Category
Economics of Education
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: economic growth, human capital, cognitive skills, schooling, U.S. states
JEL Classification: I250, O470, J240

Also published as: NBER Working Paper No. 21295 (PDF)