Gustavo Henrique Leite de Castro , Carlos Roberto Azzoni
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This paper examines the conditional convergence of cognitive, social, and motor skills among manufacturing occupations in Brazil from 2003 to 2019. Using a spatial panel econometric approach, we analyze whether less industrialized regions are catching up in terms of workforce sophistication and how spatial spillovers influence this process. The study introduces a skill-based framework that moves beyond traditional education-based human capital measures, incorporating an index that captures occupational skill complexity. Our results indicate evidence of conditional skill convergence, with social skills exhibiting the fastest convergence rate, followed by cognitive and motor skills. Spatial spillover effects are significant, reinforcing the role of geographic proximity in skill development dynamics. These findings contribute to understanding how industrial labor markets evolve in developing economies and provide relevant information for regional policy design aimed at reducing skill disparities.
期刊介绍:
Regional Science is the official journal of the Regional Science Association International. It encourages high quality scholarship on a broad range of topics in the field of regional science. These topics include, but are not limited to, behavioral modeling of location, transportation, and migration decisions, land use and urban development, interindustry analysis, environmental and ecological analysis, resource management, urban and regional policy analysis, geographical information systems, and spatial statistics. The journal publishes papers that make a new contribution to the theory, methods and models related to urban and regional (or spatial) matters.