Education, signaling and the allocation of entrepreneurial skills

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Education, signaling and the allocation of entrepreneurial skills

Publication date: 2017-10-02

Authors: Arozamena, Leandro ; Ruffo, Hernán

We assess the allocative importance of education when workers can choose to self-employ. To do so, we build a model combining educational choices with the labor market and selfemployment. Education can increase workers' human capital and may signal their ability as well. Both roles can be more important for working in a firm than for self-employment. We show that when education performs worse its signaling role, firms cannot distinguish high and low productivity workers, and there is a higher proportion of workers that allocate in less productive activities as self-employed. This option further reduces incentives to educate, given that education is less valuable for a worker if self-employed. Lowering the cost of education increases the number of educated workers, but does not solve the signaling problem, and could generate stronger misallocation.

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Language: en

Format: pdf

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Cite publication

Arozamena, Leandro; Ruffo, Hernán. (2017). Education, signaling and the allocation of entrepreneurial skills. Buenos Aires: CAF

Authors

Arozamena, Leandro

No. of publications 2

Ruffo, Hernán

No. of publications 4

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