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Original Articles

A dynamic Mincer equation with an application to Portuguese data

Pages 2091-2098 | Published online: 18 Dec 2008
 

Abstract

This article argues in favour of a dynamic specification of the Mincer equation, where the past observed earnings play the role of additional explanatory variable for current observed earnings. A dynamic approach offers an explanation why the return to schooling in terms of observed earnings is not independent of labour-market experience, as suggested by some recent empirical evidence for the United States.

Acknowledgements

I gratefully acknowledge financial support from the European Commission (EDWIN Project, HPSE-CT-2002-00108). For valuable comments on an earlier version of this article, I would like to thank Pedro Telhado Pereira, Santiago Budría, Günther Lang, Joop Hartog, Rudolf Winter-Ebmer and the participants at the 6th Meeting of the EDWIN Project.

Notes

1 Although not original, I believe that Section II is crucial for this article.

2 It is assumed that schooling starts at the beginning of life.

3 Notice that the symbol of equality (=) in expression (Equation4) becomes a symbol of rough equality (≈) in expression (Equation5).

4 See Taylor (Citation1999) for a good survey.

5 See expression (Equation8).

6 Notice that ρβ[1/(1 − (1 − ρ))] = β.

7 See, for instance, expression (Equation22).

8 Examples are provided by Hartog et al. (Citation2001), Machado and Mata (Citation2001) and Andini (Citation2008), among others.

9 Notice that, using my terminology, this difference measures the impact of schooling on within-groups net potential wage inequality.

10 See Pereira and Martins (Citation2002b) and Budría and Pereira (Citation2005).

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