An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.

This paper explores the incentives faced by employers for supplying general training of the type given to craft apprentices. An investment model is developed in which the employer's return takes the form of reduced recruitment costs for skilled labor. An empirical model is derived and fitted to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stevens, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1994
_version_ 1826281077005615104
author Stevens, M
author_facet Stevens, M
author_sort Stevens, M
collection OXFORD
description This paper explores the incentives faced by employers for supplying general training of the type given to craft apprentices. An investment model is developed in which the employer's return takes the form of reduced recruitment costs for skilled labor. An empirical model is derived and fitted to apprentice recruitment data for the British engineering industry, 1966-88. The model succeeds in predicting the collapse of apprentice training in the 1980s; important explanatory variables are the real interest rate and an index of skill shortages.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:23:21Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:7d4834a0-858b-490a-855b-befba32f5335
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:23:21Z
publishDate 1994
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:7d4834a0-858b-490a-855b-befba32f53352022-03-26T21:02:38ZAn Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7d4834a0-858b-490a-855b-befba32f5335EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints1994Stevens, MThis paper explores the incentives faced by employers for supplying general training of the type given to craft apprentices. An investment model is developed in which the employer's return takes the form of reduced recruitment costs for skilled labor. An empirical model is derived and fitted to apprentice recruitment data for the British engineering industry, 1966-88. The model succeeds in predicting the collapse of apprentice training in the 1980s; important explanatory variables are the real interest rate and an index of skill shortages.
spellingShingle Stevens, M
An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title_full An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title_fullStr An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title_full_unstemmed An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title_short An Investment Model for the Supply of Training by Employers.
title_sort investment model for the supply of training by employers
work_keys_str_mv AT stevensm aninvestmentmodelforthesupplyoftrainingbyemployers
AT stevensm investmentmodelforthesupplyoftrainingbyemployers