人力资本外部性与美国成人死亡率

Christopher H. Wheeler
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引用次数: 4

摘要

现在,人们普遍认识到人力资本可以给投资人力资本的人带来许多好处,包括更高的收入、更低的失业率和更好的健康。然而,最近的证据表明,它也产生了更大的社会(外部)效益,比如更高的总收入和生产率,以及更低的犯罪率和政治腐败。本文考虑人力资本是否也通过降低死亡率提供外部效益。也就是说,在考虑了包括收入和教育在内的各种个人特征之后,我们是否观察到在总人口中平均教育水平较高的经济体中死亡率较低?从20世纪90年代的200多个美国大都市地区的样本中得出的证据表明,在健康方面存在显著的人力资本外部性。在考虑了各种城市特征后,研究结果表明,大学毕业生在人口中所占比例每减少5个百分点,平均而言,死亡概率就会增加14%至36%。虽然我无法确定这种关系运作的确切机制,但它肯定符合这样一种观点,即与受过高等教育的人(往往表现出相对健康的行为)的互动会鼓励其他人采取类似的行为。在美国201个大都市地区的样本中,总人力资本与吸烟之间存在显著的负相关关系(以个人特征为条件)的证据也与这一假设相一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Human Capital Externalities and Adult Mortality in the U.S.
Human capital is now widely recognized to confer numerous benefits, including higher incomes, lower incidence of unemployment, and better health, to those who invest in it. Yet, recent evidence suggests that it also produces larger, social (external) benefits, such as greater aggregate income and productivity as well as lower rates of crime and political corruption. This paper considers whether human capital also delivers external benefits via reduced mortality. That is, after conditioning on various individual-specific characteristics including income and education, do we observe lower rates of mortality in economies with higher average levels of education among the total population? Evidence from a sample of more than 200 U.S. metropolitan areas over the decade of the 1990s suggests that there are significant human capital externalities on health. After conditioning on a variety of city-specific characteristics, the findings suggest that a 5 percentage point decrease in the fraction of college graduates in the population corresponds to a 14 to 36 percent increase in the probability of death, on average. Although I am unable to identify the precise mechanism by which this relationship operates, it is certainly consistent with the idea that interactions with highly educated individuals - who tend to exhibit relatively healthy behaviors - encourage others to adopt similar behaviors. Evidence of a significant inverse relationship between aggregate human capital and smoking, conditional on personal characteristics, in a sample of 201 U.S. metropolitan areas is also consistent with this hypothesis.
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