Abstract

Recent research has focused on the effects of economic volatility on the investment in physical capital; this paper shows that economic volatility and the lack of financial markets have a negative effect also on the accumulation of human capital. Our evidence, drawn from cross-country and panel regressions is that average secondary enrollment in the period 1970–1972 is negatively affected by: the lack of financial markets, income or employment volatility, and income inequality. Our results are robust to: different specifications of volatility, the inclusion of public expenditure in education, country specific effects, and different sets of regressors.

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