Working paper icon

Working paper

Firm Provision of General Training and Specific Human Capital Acquisition

Abstract:
The existing literature on training is concerned with understanding the reasons why firms pay for the general skills of their workers, but without explaining which firms train which workers. This paper develops a theory that both explains the willingness of firms to pay for general training, and accounts for the pattern of training provision empirically observed. It is assumed that labor markets are perfectly competitive, but there is imperfect contractibility of human capital. Under these assumptions, when training and specific human capital are complements, the firm would pay for the former in order to induce the acquisition of complementary specific skills by the worker.

Actions

Access Document

Files:

Authors


Publisher:
Department of Economics (University of Oxford)
Series:
Discussion paper series
Publication date:
2004-01-01


Language:
English
UUID:
uuid:9b481fad-367e-485f-831c-61d37cde4961
Local pid:
ora:1237
Deposit date:
2011-08-16
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP