Review Article
Institutions, Human Capital, and Development*
- Daron Acemoglu1,2,Francisco A. Gallego3, andJames A. Robinson2,4
- View AffiliationsHide AffiliationsAffiliations:1Department of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142; email:[email protected]2Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8, Canada3Instituto de Economía and Economic History and Cliometrics Lab, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Macul, Santiago, Chile; email:[email protected]4Department of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138; email:[email protected]
- Vol. 6:875-912(Volume publication date August 2014)
- © Annual Reviews
Abstract
In this article, we revisit the relationship among institutions, human capital, and development. We argue that empirical models that treat institutions and human capital as exogenous are misspecified, both because of the usual omitted variable bias problems and because of differential measurement error in these variables, and that this misspecification is at the root of the very large returns of human capital, about four to five times greater than that implied by micro (Mincerian) estimates, found in the previous literature. Using cross-country and cross-regional regressions, we show that when we focus on historically determined differences in human capital and control for the effect of institutions, the impact of institutions on long-run development is robust, whereas the estimates of the effect of human capital are much diminished and become consistent with micro estimates. Using historical and cross-country regression evidence, we also show that there is no support for the view that differences in the human capital endowments of early European colonists have been a major factor in the subsequent institutional development of former colonies.