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Higher education,employment and economic growth: Exploring the interactions
Authors:Haroon Bhorat  Aalia Cassim  David Tseng
Institution:1. Professor, School of Economics, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa;2. Director, Development Policy Research Unit, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africaharoon.bhorat@uct.ac.za;4. Resercher, Development Policy Research Unit, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa
Abstract:ABSTRACT

This article interrogates the impact and nature of South Africa’s post-apartheid economic growth performance through the lens of human capital investment with a particular emphasis on higher education. The South African economy has been characterised by a skills-biased trajectory, ensuring jobs for the better educated. By differentiating between tertiary and vocational training, we find that further education and training (FET) graduates are almost as likely to be employed as school leavers without higher education. We analyse the extent to which the educational attainments of labour affect the nature and trajectory of economic growth in South Africa, by estimating Olley and Pakes’ two-stage regression on a modified Cobb–Douglas production function. The results indicate that the degree cohort contributes to economic growth whilst other higher education institutions, including FET colleges, do not productively contribute to economic growth.
Keywords:Cobb–Douglas production function  growth  higher education  human capital  labour  productivity  vocational training
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