Clark, Jeremy; Kim, Bonggeun; Poulton, Richie; Milne, Barry - In: Canadian Journal of Economics 39 (2006) 4, pp. 1151-1172
Young people with little `social or health capital' may be more likely to take up hazardous consumption and shun investments in human capital, raising their likelihood of a `rags to rags' sequence. First, diminishing marginal utility could raise the marginal benefit of hazardous consumption and...