Publication | Closed Access
Empirical Age-Earnings Profiles
621
Citations
5
References
1990
Year
Earnings GrowthLabor Market ParticipationEmpirical Age-earnings ProfilesProductivityEmpirical SpecificationEconomics Of AgingRemuneration PracticeEconomic AnalysisTransfer EarningsEconomic InequalityEconomicsWorkforce ProductivityAccountingLabor Market OutcomeLabor EconomicsFinanceBusinessPotential ExperienceLabor Market ImpactDemography
The "human capital earnings function," in which earnings are expressed as a quadratic in potential experience, is probably the most widely accepted empirical specification in economics. In spite of its widespread acceptance, the human capital earnings function provides a very poor approximation of the true empirical relationship between earnings and experience. The standard formulation understates early career earnings growth by about 30%-50% and overstates midcareer growth by 20%-50%. However, simple alternative specifications that fit the data are available.
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