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Financial Literacy, Human Capital and Long-Run Economic Growth
Abstract
We extend a two-sector endogenous growth model based on human capital
accumulation along two different directions. First, by postulating that
individuals may invest time-resources not only in the accumulation of
human capital (general knowledge) but also in the accumulation of
financial literacy (specific financial knowledge). Second, we maintain
that the efficiency with which savings are transferred intertemporally
may improve over time, e.g. through the presence of a financial system.
We use the model to analyze the relationship between financial literacy
and economic growth in the long run. We show that the properties of the
balanced growth path equilibrium critically depend on how human capital
and financial literacy affect the efficiency of the financial system.
Moreover, finance promotes long-run economic growth through two
alternative channels, driven either by dynamics of financial returns or
by human capital accumulation, respectively. By calibrating the model to
the US economy over the 1950-2019 period, we quantitatively assess the
effect of financial literacy on long-term growth and the relative
magnitude of the two channels.
Keyworks
Economic Growth, Financial Literacy, Financial Return, Human Capital