Abstract

Human capital, as reflected in education levels and skills, and innovation is an important engine of economic growth. The Caribbean is deficient in both: lower than expected GDP growth rates are accompanied by relatively low innovation at the firm level, and the workforce is characterised by skills deficiencies and educational mismatches. In that regard, this paper exploits firm-level data covering 13 Caribbean countries to examine the extent to which innovation, a key driver of productivity growth, is affected by firms’ inability to find appropriately educated and skilled workers to fill key positions in its organizational structure, which is estimated using Probit models distinguishing between past and future innovation decisions. The econometric analysis finds that firms that have difficulty finding new skilled employees are less likely to engage in any type of innovation compared to those that can, and this is also true for decisions about future technological and non-technological innovations. Moreover, firms that face challenges finding employees with the required core and job-related skills at the managerial and professional levels are also less likely to innovate. Finally, while in-firm training is found to increase the probability of innovation, its magnitude is low.

Highlights

  • Low economic growth is perhaps the Caribbean’s greatest Achilles’ heel

  • The findings from the regressions show that the challenge that Caribbean firms face in recruiting skilled employees and educational mismatches in their workforce at the managerial and professional levels reduce the probability of innovation

  • This paper sought to fill the gap on the extent to which human capital constraints affect past and future innovation decisions of Caribbean firms

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Summary

Introduction

Low economic growth is perhaps the Caribbean’s greatest Achilles’ heel. Studies that examined this issue have put forward various explanations and hypotheses to explain the region’s low growth performance, with most of them related to deep-rooted competitiveness problems and low levels of productivity, among other structural challenges (Acevedo et al 2013; Alleyne et al 2017; Fuentes et al 2015). Firm-level innovation in the Caribbean is low relative to countries of comparable population size as evidenced by determinants such as expenditure on research and development, the number of patents registered per million persons and technology adoption by the government (Ruprah and Sierra 2016)

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