比利时的人力资本回报(STEM)

Gert Bijnens, E. Dhyne
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引用次数: 5

摘要

虽然整体生产力增长停滞不前,但处于前沿的公司仍然能够从最新技术和商业实践中获益。本文使用了覆盖所有比利时公司近20年的关联雇主-雇员数据,并调查了高生产率企业和低生产率企业之间人力资本的差异。我们发现,企业劳动力中高技能和STEM工人的比例与其生产率之间存在明显的正相关关系。我们得到企业生产率作为高技能工人比例函数的弹性为0.20至0.70。对于所有技能水平的STEM(科学、技术、工程、数学)工作者,我们发现弹性为0.20至0.45。更重要的是,随着时间的推移,STEM工人的弹性在增加,而高技能工人的弹性在下降。这可能与高等教育毕业生人数增加有关,同时也与填补stem相关职位空缺的难度增加有关。具体来说,对于制造业的高技能STEM工人来说,生产率的提高可能比雇佣额外的高技能非STEM工人高出4倍。为了确保政府在企业内增加采用最新技术和商业实践的努力能够带来可持续的生产率提高,这些行动应该伴随着增加人力资本(STEM)供应和流动性的措施。没有适当的技能供应,企业将无法获得数字革命的全部好处。
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The return on human (STEM) capital in Belgium
Whilst overall productivity growth is stalling, firms at the frontier are still able to capture the benefits of the newest technologies and business practices. This paper uses linked employer-employee data covering all Belgian firms over a period of almost 20 years and investigates the differences in human capital between highly productive firms and less productive firms. We find a clear positive correlation between the share of high-skilled and STEM workers in a firm's workforce and its productivity. We obtain elasticities of 0.20 to 0.70 for a firm's productivity as a function of the share of high-skilled workers. For STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) workers, of all skill levels, we find elasticities of 0.20 to 0.45. More importantly, the elasticity of STEM workers is increasing over time, whereas the elasticity of high-skilled workers is decreasing. This is possibly linked with the increasing number of tertiary education graduates and at the same time increased difficulties in filling STEM-related vacancies. Specifically, for high-skilled STEM workers in the manufacturing sector, the productivity gain can be as much as 4 times higher than the gain from hiring additional high-skilled non-STEM workers. To ensure that government efforts to increase the adoption of the latest technologies and business practices within firms lead to sustainable productivity gains, such actions should be accompanied by measures to increase the supply and mobility of human (STEM) capital. Without a proper supply of skills, firms will not be able to reap the full benefits of the digital revolution.
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