HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION AND ECONOMIC GROWTH RELATIONSHIPS: PANEL DATA INSIGHTS FOR THE INDIAN STATES

Imran HUSSAIN

Department of Economics, Vidyasagar University, Midnapore, India

 imranhussaingrp@gmail.com

Ramesh CHANDRA DAS

Department of Economics, Vidyasagar University, Midnapore, India

ramesh051073@gmail.com

(corresponding)

Abstract

The various endogenous growth theories as well as empirical studies have proved that human capital works as an important factor for economy’s growth. The role of income on human capital formation cannot be overlooked so far as the essences of the endogenous growth theories are concerned. Considering this interconnection among the human capital and income of the economy, the present study provides quantitative evidence to show the associations amongst human capital formation as quantified by the governments’ health and education expenditures and income of the economy measured by states’ gross domestic products for the panel of states and union territories of India during the period from 1998-99 to 2018-19. The technique of panel cointegration is used to show the long run relationships among human capital investment and income of the economy, and then the Wald test is used to examine the direction of short-run causality. The empirical results demonstrate that human capital and state incomes have a long-term relationship. The Wald test reveals a short-run linkage between human capital and income of the state economies, with the causality running from human capital investment to output of the economy. i.e., human capital has an immediate influence on the progress of the economy. It is consequently suggested that the governments of the states and union territories make additional investments in sectors such as education and health in order to secure long-term economic prosperity.

Keywords: Human capital, education, health, growth, panel cointegration, Indian states

JEL classification: I1, I2, O3, C32, C33

pp. 57-71

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TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, TECHNOLOGICAL CATCH-UP AND MARKET POTENTIAL: EVIDENCE FROM THE EU REGIONS

Dimitris KALLIORAS

Associate Professor, Department of Planning and Regional Development, University of Thessaly, ORCID ID: 0000-0003-3060-3745

dkallior@uth.gr

Nickolaos TZEREMES

Associate Professor, Department of Economics, University of Thessaly,ORCID ID: 0000-0002-6938-3404

bus9nt@uth.gr

Panayiotis TZEREMES

Assistant Professor, Department of Accounting and Finance, University of Thessaly, ORCID ID: 0000-0002-0746-3839

tzeremes@uth.gr

Maria ADAMAKOU

PhD Candidate, Department of Planning and Regional Development, University of Thessaly

madamakou@uth.gr

Abstract

The paper examines the way(s) market potential affects the EU regions’ technological change and technological catch-up. The analysis refers to a sample of 263 NUTS II EU regions and covers the period 1995-2008 (i.e. prior to the outburst of the economic crisis). On the basis of the latest advances of nonparametric frontier analysis, and in the presence of dynamic effects, time-dependent conditional nonparametric frontiers are developed. The incorporation of the dynamic effects of the EU regions’ market potential conditions, allows for modelling the corresponding effects on technological change and technological catch-up. The findings of the paper provide valuable insight to both theory and policy-making, revealing that, within the integrated EU space, market potential acts as a technology-initiating factor, creating asymmetric effects and leaving a distinct “spatial footprint” with respect to the processes of technological change and technological catch-up.

Keywords: technological change, technological catch-up, market potential, EU regions, nonparametric frontier analysis

JEL classification: C14, O3, R11

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