Content №1 от 2018

Evaluating the Impact of Human Capital on Economic Dynamics in Russian Regions

The authors evaluate the impact of human capital on economic dynamics in Russian regions against significant shifts in the educational structure of the employed population, characterized by a dominant share ofpeople with higher education in most regions. The main hypothesis of the study states that only specific groups of regions could obtain real benefits from a significant increase in the share of employed with higher education. The results of estimation of panel regressions with fixed effects demonstrate that human capital accu­mulation somewhat increases the rates of economic growth in regions with industrial specialization, high scientific potential, and those located in the western part of Russia. The human capital has no significant effect on economic growth in regions with specialization in services and mining. An increase in the share of employed with higher education increases growth rates in under­developed and agricultural regions with decreasing return to scale. The low share of the gainfully employed population with basic vocational education constrains growth in regions specializing in industrial production and services. At the same time, the human capital concentrated in the research and deve­lopment sector has no significant effect on growth even in the regions with high scientific potential due to the «disconnected» character of regional innovation systems and the low level of demand for innovations from the majority of Rus­sian industrial enterprises.

Teslenko V. A. valentinateslenko@gmail.com

Melnikov R. M. rmmel@mail.ru

Full-text issues of the Journal in PDF format are available since 2006 (except for the ones published within the last year)

pdf-icon.png