MARKET FORCES SHAPING HUMAN CAPITAL IN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY LONDON
We draw on quantitative and descriptive data from Robert Campbell’s widely cited manual for prospective apprentices, The London Tradesman (1747), to demonstrate the responsiveness of apprenticeship in mid-eighteenth century London to market forces of supply and demand. We regress apprenticeship premiums on journeymen’s wages, set up costs and a selection of employment conditions and requirements across 178 trades, and find a significant elasticity of 0.4 with respect to wages and 0.25 with respect to set-up costs. We interpret this as supporting an economic model that views premiums as bounded from above by the expected benefits of acquiring the skills of the trade (Lane, 1996); bounded from below by the expected net training costs to the master, taking into account the possibility of the apprentice terminating his service prematurely (Wallis, 2008); and reflecting the relative bargaining power of master and parent. This supports the thesis that apprenticeship played an important role in adapting the English workforce to the skill requirements of the Industrial Revolution.
Year of publication: |
2013
|
---|---|
Authors: | Justman, Moshe ; Beck, Karine van der |
Institutions: | Economics Department, Ben Gurion University of the Negev |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Justman, Moshe, (2013)
-
Justman, Moshe, (2013)
-
Common-Value All-Pay Auctions with Asymmetric Information and Bid Caps
Einy, Ezra, (2014)
- More ...