HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA

Education positively affects a person's income. It can be explained in two ways. Firstly, education directly increases the productivity of a person, which is in accordance with the views of the theory of human capital. The second way is an indirect effect, in which education acts as a sign (sig...

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Main Authors: Nenny Hendajany, Tri Widodo, Eny Sulistyaningrum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2016-05-01
Series:Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/15290
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spelling doaj-89216a21c5e545afb0103000e773e4c32021-06-02T17:32:42ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaJournal of Indonesian Economy and Business2085-82722338-58472016-05-0131219220710.22146/jieb.15290HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIANenny Hendajany0Tri Widodo1Eny Sulistyaningrum2Faculty of Economics, Universitas Sangga Buana YPKP Bandung, IndonesiaFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, IndonesiaFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, IndonesiaEducation positively affects a person's income. It can be explained in two ways. Firstly, education directly increases the productivity of a person, which is in accordance with the views of the theory of human capital. The second way is an indirect effect, in which education acts as a sign (signal) of a worker’s unobserved characteristics, as assessed by an employer who is considering hiring the person. This is consistent with the view of the signaling theory. Both views are often debated in literature. This paper examines the returns to education in Indonesia, separating out the credential effects from the pure years of schooling effects. We used survey data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS) 2000, 2007, and 2014 to test the difference of the two theories in estimating the returns to education in Indonesia. This study used three models which consisted of the human capital model, the signaling model, and the hybrid model. The human capital model used the number of years of schooling as a variable representing education, the signaling model used dummy variables from the level of education achieved (elementary school, junior high school, senior high school, diploma, university), and the hybrid model combined both measures of the variables. The hybrid model allows for the separation of the impact of human capital based on an additional year of schooling, and the impact of signaling by the accomplishment of a particular certificate. The results of the study provide strong evidence of the presence of the returns to education either through the human capital or the signaling theories.https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/15290educationhuman capitalsignalingreturns to education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nenny Hendajany
Tri Widodo
Eny Sulistyaningrum
spellingShingle Nenny Hendajany
Tri Widodo
Eny Sulistyaningrum
HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
education
human capital
signaling
returns to education
author_facet Nenny Hendajany
Tri Widodo
Eny Sulistyaningrum
author_sort Nenny Hendajany
title HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
title_short HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
title_full HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
title_fullStr HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
title_full_unstemmed HUMAN CAPITAL VERSUS THE SIGNALING HYPOTHESES: THE CASE OF INDONESIA
title_sort human capital versus the signaling hypotheses: the case of indonesia
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
issn 2085-8272
2338-5847
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Education positively affects a person's income. It can be explained in two ways. Firstly, education directly increases the productivity of a person, which is in accordance with the views of the theory of human capital. The second way is an indirect effect, in which education acts as a sign (signal) of a worker’s unobserved characteristics, as assessed by an employer who is considering hiring the person. This is consistent with the view of the signaling theory. Both views are often debated in literature. This paper examines the returns to education in Indonesia, separating out the credential effects from the pure years of schooling effects. We used survey data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS) 2000, 2007, and 2014 to test the difference of the two theories in estimating the returns to education in Indonesia. This study used three models which consisted of the human capital model, the signaling model, and the hybrid model. The human capital model used the number of years of schooling as a variable representing education, the signaling model used dummy variables from the level of education achieved (elementary school, junior high school, senior high school, diploma, university), and the hybrid model combined both measures of the variables. The hybrid model allows for the separation of the impact of human capital based on an additional year of schooling, and the impact of signaling by the accomplishment of a particular certificate. The results of the study provide strong evidence of the presence of the returns to education either through the human capital or the signaling theories.
topic education
human capital
signaling
returns to education
url https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/15290
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