Demographic Change, Human Capital and Endogenous Growth
Content
This paper employs a large scale overlapping generations (OLG) model with endogenous education
to evaluate the quantitative role of human capital adjustments for the economic consequences of
demographic change. We find that endogenous human capital formation is an important adjustment
mechanism which substantially mitigates the macroeconomic impact of demographic change. Welfare
gains from demographic change for newborn households are approximately three times higher when
households endogenously adjust their education. Low ability agents experience higher welfare gains.
Endogenous growth through human capital formation is found to increase the long-run growth rate in
the economy by 0.2-0.4 percentage points.
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