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The 4th International Symposium on Human Capital and the Labor Market

Time:2014-07-25 14:02:00   Click:  Source:CHLR
“The 4th international symposium on human capital and the labor market celebrating release of the China human capital report 2012” was held in CUFE on December 14, 2012. The symposium, which was organized by China Center for Human Capital and Labor Market Research, aimed to release the China human capital report 2012 and provide a platform for an in-depth discussion of human capital issues.

Besides a regular plenary meeting, the symposium also included three sessions to discuss a variety of human capital issues. The plenary meeting was hosted by Prof. Barbara Fraumeni from University of Southern Maine. The first, second and the third sessions were chaired by Prof. Rachel Connelly from Bowdoin College; Prof. Zhenhui Xu from University of Georgia and Prof. Dennis Tao Yang from University of Virginia, respectively.

In the plenary meeting, the director of the Center and the Human Capital project, Prof. Haizheng Li, presented the 2012 report. Following that, Prof. Weiping Li, the chief researcher from Chinese Academy of Personnel Science, and Prof. Dennis Tao Yang, gave their comments and suggestions on the report.

The report provides updates on the 2011 report in the following areas: uses the updated provincial statistical data; computes human capital for five new provinces (Tianjin, Heilongjiang, Zhejiang, Guangxi and Shaanxi) and adds the analysis of relative trends in human capital for those five new provinces; and also updates interprovincial comparison in human capital.

The report shows that, form 1985 to 2009, the human capital of China increased from 26.03 trillion to 146.46 trillion Yuan, an increase of nearly five-fold. Specifically, the growth of human capital accelerated after 1995. And the ratio of GDP to human capital demonstrated a rising trend, which suggested an increased efficiency of human capital.

Among the 17 provinces estimated, the top three provinces ranked by human capital stock in 2009 were Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shandong; and by human capital per capita were Shanghai, Zhejiang and Beijing. While China had a large total human capital stock, its human capital per capita was relatively low compared to developed countries.

Based on the estimated results, the main reasons for growth of human capital were urbanization and education. On the other hand, the changing age structure caused by aging population was reducing human capital stock. Moreover, the current mandated retirement age in China induced people to drop out of labor market when their human capital was still relatively high, which could affect the utilization of human capital and future human capital investment.

In addition, the report also suggests that the lack of human capital in undeveloped provinces led to the backwardness of the economy. The government could encourage and help the undeveloped provinces strengthen the investment in human capital to increase the speed of economic growth, which could help promote balance in economic development across regions.

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