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Book Essays on Human Capital Mobility and Asset Pricing

Download or read book Essays on Human Capital Mobility and Asset Pricing written by Andres Francisco Donangelo and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page 296 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation explores the intersection between labor and financial markets, in which labor mobility plays a fundamental role. Unlike physical assets such as buildings or machines, human capital can actually walk away from the firm as employees and managers switch employers. The interaction between labor mobility, firm risk and human capital has been remarkably under-researched until now. The main question of this broad project is how differences in the flexibility of workers to find employment across different industries--labor mobility--affects the owners of human and physical capital. The three parts of the dissertation look at this question from different angles. The first part, Labor Mobility and the Cross-Section of Expected Returns, focuses on the effect of labor mobility on the degree of operating leverage of a firm and thus on asset returns. I construct a dynamic model where worker's employment decisions affect the productivity of capital and asset prices in predictable ways. The model shows that reliance on a workforce with flexibility to enter and exit an industry translates into a form of operating leverage that amplifies equity-holders' exposure to productivity shocks. Consequently, firms in an industry with mobile workers have higher systematic risk loadings and higher expected asset returns. I use data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to construct a novel measure of labor supply mobility, in line with the model, based on the composition of occupations across industries over time. I document a positive and economically significant cross-sectional relation between measures of labor mobility, operating leverage, and expected asset returns. This relation is not explained by firm characteristics known in the literature to predict expected returns. The second part, Aggregate Asset-Pricing Implications of Human Capital Mobility in General Equilibrium, extends the model in the first chapter to consider the general equilibrium implications of labor mobility. The setup is based on a multi-industry dynamic economy with production. The extended model shows that mobility of labor affects not only cash-flows, but also aggregate risk, and the equity premium. This part considers two different types of human capital. Generalist human capital can move between industries, while specialized human capital and physical capital cannot. The greater relative mobility of human capital relative to physical capital affects how aggregate risk in the economy is split between these two components of total wealth. The model shows that aggregate consumption and wealth increase when human capital is more mobile. However, at the same time, aggregate risk and the equity risk premium also increase under human capital mobility. I assume that the workforce in the economy is exogenously given in the first two chapters of this dissertation. This assumption is relaxed in the third chapter, Investments in Human Capital and Expected Asset Returns, where I endogenize the composition of occupations to discuss the interaction between human capital investments and labor mobility. This chapter focuses on the decision of workers to acquire different types of costly human capital with different degrees of associated labor mobility. This part introduces a two-sector general-equilibrium model with production and investments in human capital (i.e. education). Ex-ante identical workers face a trade-off between breadth and depth in the acquisition of industry-specific labor productivity. This chapter derives sufficient conditions for the existence of mobile workers. When these conditions are met, a fraction of workers chooses to acquire mobile but less productive generalist skills, even when labor risk can be fully hedged in financial markets.

Book Two Essays on Human Capital and Firm Valuation

Download or read book Two Essays on Human Capital and Firm Valuation written by Vanessa M. Holmes and published by . This book was released on 2006 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The study in Essay 1, entitled "Human Capital, Asset Pricing and Price Factors, "seeks to determine the relation between firm human capital and market valuation, specifically, the question of whether human capital is incorporated into the share price of publicly-held firms. Human capital is investigated through the use of various market valuation models.

Book Two Essays on Human Capital Accumulation and Economic Growth

Download or read book Two Essays on Human Capital Accumulation and Economic Growth written by Alexandros T. Mourmouras and published by . This book was released on 1988 with total page 190 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Human Capital and Finance

Download or read book Essays on Human Capital and Finance written by Miguel Palacios and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 300 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Investment in Human Capital  Labor Mobility and Inequality

Download or read book Investment in Human Capital Labor Mobility and Inequality written by Elisabeth Magnani and published by . This book was released on 1996 with total page 320 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Systems Competition with Human Capital Mobility

Download or read book Essays on Systems Competition with Human Capital Mobility written by Thomas Lange and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Human Capital and Financial Markets

Download or read book Essays on Human Capital and Financial Markets written by Euikyu Choi and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 65 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation examines various aspects of human capital and their linkage to the financial markets. The first chapter empirically shows that the cost of debt is systematically higher for firms that operate in mobile labor markets. We posit two channels through which labor mobility could positively affect firms' cost of debt. First, relates to greater default risk arising from potential loss of key personnel and a corresponding reduction in future cash flows, while the second relates to lower liquidation value (collateral) given that the firms' human capital is more transient, which reduces pledgeable assets. Using across state, cross-sectional variations in the degree of enforceability of non-compete agreements which restrict employee mobility as a proxy for anticipated labor mobility, and state-level reforms to non-compete laws to capture exogenous shocks to labor mobility, we find that labor mobility (inverse of the strength of non-compete enforceability) has a significantly positive effect on the credit spreads of public corporate bonds (our measure of the cost of debt) issued from 1990 - 2014 for large, U.S. industrial firms. Moreover, the analysis reveals that the effect of labor mobility is greater for firms that are located in states which have a higher concentration of industry rivals or for firms that are comprised primarily of professional, knowledge workers, which corroborates the main results. Overall, these findings suggest that creditors price financial contracts by taking into account the risk that arises from labor mobility. The second chapter examines the effect of shareholder monitoring on the relation between human capital and firm value. The extant literature suggests that influential, concentrated ownership facilitates close shareholder monitoring and reduces information asymmetries between shareholders and the firm (Demsetz, 1985; Anderson and Reeb, 2003). Yet, intense monitoring by shareholders can impede employees' initiatives and effort (Shleifer and Vishny, 1988; Burkart, Gromb, and Panunzi, 1997). We argue that such a cost can be significant when firm output relies on specialized - rather than more generic - human capital, which require self-motivation and autonomy to be productive. Consistent with our argument, the empirical evidence indicates that firm value suffers in the presence of highly influential ownership, but only when firm productivity depends on specialized human capital. We do not find such an effect when human capital is more generalized. Specifically, we observe that an equity portfolio that is long on firms with influential ownership and short on firms without influential ownership earns a significantly negative abnormal return from 2002 to 2010, but again, only for firms with specialized human capital. Overall, our results delineate the importance of considering the linkages between human capital and financial markets, which could impact the allocation of capital in the economy, and moreover, on economic growth.

Book Essays on Human Capital  Geography  and the Family

Download or read book Essays on Human Capital Geography and the Family written by Garrett Anstreicher and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this dissertation, I study the interplay of familial and geographic factors in influencing human capital development and economic mobility in the United States. The first chapter extends a canonical model of intergenerational human capital investment to a geographic context in order to study the role of migration in determining optimal human capital accumulation and income mobility in the United States. The main result is that migration is considerably influential in shaping the high rates of economic mobility observed among children from low-wage areas, with human capital investment behavioral responses being important to consider. Equalizing school quality across locations does more to reduce interstate inequality in income mobility than equalizing skill prices, and policies that attempt to decrease human capital flight from low-wage areas via cash transfers are unlikely to be cost-effective. The second chapter, joint with Joanna Venator, studies how childcare costs, the location of extended family, and fertility events influence both the labor force attachment and labor mobility of women in the United States. We begin by empirically documenting strong patterns of women returning to their home locations in anticipation of fertility events, indicating that the desire for intergenerational time transfers is an important motivator of home migration. Moreover, women who reside in their parent's location experience a substantial long-run reduction in their child earnings penalty. Next, we build a dynamic model of labor force participation and migration to assess the incidence of counterfactual scenarios and childcare policies. We find that childcare subsidies increase lifetime earnings and labor mobility for women, with particularly strong effects for women who are ever single mothers and Blacks. Ignoring migration understates these benefits by a meaningful extent. The third chapter, joint with Owen Thompson and Jason Fletcher, studies the long-run impacts of court-ordered desegregation. Court ordered desegregation plans were implemented in hundreds of US school districts nationwide from the 1960s through the 1980s, and were arguably the most substantive national attempt to improve educational access for African American children in modern American history. Using large Census samples that are linked to Social Security records containing county of birth, we implement event studies that estimate the long run effects of exposure to desegregation orders on human capital and labor market outcomes. We find that African Americans who were relatively young when a desegregation order was implemented in their county of birth, and therefore had more exposure to integrated schools, experienced large improvements in adult human capital and labor market outcomes relative to Blacks who were older when a court order was locally implemented. There are no comparable changes in outcomes among whites in counties undergoing an order, or among Blacks who were beyond school ages when a local order was implemented. These effects are strongly concentrated in the South, with largely null findings in other regions. Our data and methodology provide the most comprehensive national assessment to date on the impacts of court ordered desegregation, and strongly indicate that these policies were in fact highly effective at improving the long run socioeconomic outcomes of many Black students.

Book Capital Mobility and Asset Pricing

Download or read book Capital Mobility and Asset Pricing written by Darrell Duffie and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We present a model for the equilibrium movement of capital between asset markets that are distinguished only by the levels of capital invested in each. Investment in that market with the greatest amount of capital earns the lowest risk premium. Intermediaries optimally trade off the costs of intermediation against fees that depend on the gain they can offer to investors for moving their capital to the market with the higher mean return. Those fees also depend on the bargaining power of the investor, in light of potential alternative intermediaries. In equilibrium, the speeds of adjustment of mean returns and of capital between the two markets are increasing in the degree to which capital is imbalanced between the two markets.

Book Capital Mobility  Fiscal Policy and Growth Under Self financing of Human Capital Formation

Download or read book Capital Mobility Fiscal Policy and Growth Under Self financing of Human Capital Formation written by Willem H. Buiter and published by . This book was released on 1995 with total page 58 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This paper considers the effects of fiscal and financial policy on economic growth in open and closed economies, when human capital formation by young households is constrained by the illiquidity of human wealth. Both endogenous and exogenous growth versions of the basic OLG model are analyzed. We find that intergenerational redistribution policies that discourage physical capital formation may encourage human capital formation. Despite common technologies and perfect international mobility of financial capital, the non- tradedness of human capital and the illiquidity of human wealth make for persistent differences in productivity growth rates (in the endogenous growth version of the model) or in their levels (in the exogenous growth version). We also consider the productivity growth (or level) effects of public spending on education and of the distortionary taxation of financial asset income.

Book Essays on Human Capital and Technology Shocks

Download or read book Essays on Human Capital and Technology Shocks written by Neville Francis and published by . This book was released on 2001 with total page 334 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Occupation specific Human Capital Investment and Occupational Mobility

Download or read book Essays on Occupation specific Human Capital Investment and Occupational Mobility written by Yang Wang and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page 107 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: My thesis focuses on occupation-specific human capital investment and occupational mobility. The first chapter of my thesis investigates gender disparities in early-career wage returns to firm tenure, occupational tenure, industry tenure, and general labor market experience. I show that the relative importance of various types of tenure differs across genders: occupational tenure matters more than industry tenure in men's wages, while industry tenure matters more than occupational tenure for women. Averaging across all occupations, early-career wage growth associated with occupational tenure is substantially higher for men than women. I then explore the underlying reasons for gender disparities in wage growth with occupational tenure. I show that gender differences in hours of work and occupational choice partially explain the gender gap in tenure returns, but I find no evidence that gender differences in human capital investment in education prior to labor market entry contribute to the gap. Given the evidence that occupational changes tend to improve occupational match quality, the observed higher occupational mobility of men relative to women may also explain the gender gap in wage growth with occupational tenure. The second chapter examines whether negative housing equity affects homeowners' occupational mobility. Homeowners with negative equity face stricter constraints and relatively higher occupational mobility cost than renters and homeowners who are not "underwater" which might potentially limit their ability to change occupations. I don't find any strong evidence that negative equity affects homeowners' occupational mobility in either recourse or non-recourse states. The third chapter examines the extent to which shifts in occupational structure explain the upward trend in occupational mobility during the period of 1968-1997. I find that shifts in occupational composition can partially explain the rising occupational mobility trend for less educated young workers and more educated workers. An approximate 10-20% reduction in the estimated mobility trend when occupation is controlled for implies that occupational composition generally shifted to less stable occupations. In addition, when negative occupational employment shocks are controlled for, workers in most age-education subgroups exhibit higher increases in occupational mobility.

Book Essays on Capital Asset Pricing Theory

Download or read book Essays on Capital Asset Pricing Theory written by Tony Van Zijl and published by . This book was released on 1985 with total page 316 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on the Economics of Human Capital

Download or read book Essays on the Economics of Human Capital written by Hye Mi You and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 206 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Three Essays on Human Capital

Download or read book Three Essays on Human Capital written by Xiaoyan Chen Youderian and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The first essay considers how the timing of government education spending influences the intergenerational persistence of income. We build a life-cycle model where human capital is accumulated in early and late childhood. Both families and the government can increase the human capital of young agents by investing in education at each stage of childhood. Ability in each dynasty follows a stochastic process. Different abilities and resultant spending histories generate a stochastic steady state distribution of income. We calibrate our model to match aggregate statistics in terms of education expenditures, income persistence and inequality. We show that increasing government spending in early childhood education is effective in lowering intergenerational earnings elasticity. An increase in government funding of early childhood education equivalent to 0.8 percent of GDP reduces income persistence by 8.4 percent. We find that this relatively large effect is due to the weakening relationship between family income and education investment. Since this link is already weak in late childhood, allocating more public resources to late childhood education does not improve the intergenerational mobility of economic status. Furthermore, focusing more on late childhood may raise intergenerational persistence by amplifying the gap in human capital developed in early childhood. The second essay considers parental time investment in early childhood as an education input and explores the impact of early education policies on labor supply and human capital. I develop a five-period overlapping generations model where human capital formation is a multi-stage process. An agent's human capital is accumulated through early and late childhood. Parents make income and time allocation decisions in response to government expenditures and parental leave policies. The model is calibrated to the U.S. economy so that the generated data matches the Gini index and parental participation in education expenditures. The general equilibrium environment shows that subsidizing private education spending and adopting paid parental leave are both effective at increasing human capital. These two policies give parents incentives to increase physical and time investment, respectively. Labor supply decreases due to the introduction of paid parental leave as intended. In addition, low-wage earners are most responsive to parental leave by working less and spending more time with children. The third essay is on the motherhood wage penalty. There is substantial evidence that women with children bear a wage penalty of 5 to 10 percent due to their motherhood status. This wage gap is usually estimated by comparing the wages of working mothers to childless women after controlling for human capital and individual characteristics. This method runs into the problem of selection bias by excluding non-working women. This paper addresses the issue in two ways. First, I develop a simple model of fertility and labor participation decisions to examine the relationships among fertility, employment, and wages. The model implies that mothers face different reservation wages due to variance in preference over child care, while non-mothers face the same reservation wage. Thus, a mother with a relatively high wage may choose not to work because of her strong preference for time with children. In contrast, a childless woman who is not working must face a relatively low wage. For this reason, empirical analysis that focuses only on employed women may result in a biased estimate of the motherhood wage penalty. Second, to test the predictions of the model, I use 2004-2009 data from the 1997 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97) and include non-working women in the two-stage Heckman selection model. The empirical results from OLS and the fixed effects model are consistent with the findings in previous studies. However, the child penalty becomes smaller and insignificant after non-working women are included. It implies that the observed wage gap in the labor market appears to overstate the child wage penalty due to the sample selection bias.

Book Human Capital Creation in an Economic Perspective

Download or read book Human Capital Creation in an Economic Perspective written by Rita Asplund and published by . This book was released on 2014-09-01 with total page 228 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on the Implied Cost of Capital with Applications to Asset Pricing and Corporate Finance

Download or read book Essays on the Implied Cost of Capital with Applications to Asset Pricing and Corporate Finance written by Patrick Frank Kurt Bielstein and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: