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Economic Growth, Biodiversity Conservation, and the Formation of Human Capital in a Developing Country

The Case of Guatemala

by Ludger Löning (Author)
©2004 Thesis XVIII, 250 Pages
Open Access

Summary

Can education play a role in fostering economic growth and simultaneously decrease pressure on forests? The aim of this study is to show that it can. Human capital formation is a key element in a development strategy that includes natural resource conservation within the framework of sustained economic growth and poverty alleviation. Consequently, it is not by chance that Guatemala is experiencing both minimal per capital income growth and high deforestation while having one of the lowest educational levels in Latin America. However, since many assumptions about educational benefits are controversial and many aspects depend on broader issues, human capital formation can only be one piece in a multidimensional puzzle. This study is organized into three parts, each one of which can be read independently: first, a macroeconomic assessment of education and other factors involved in the country’s growth trajectory; second, a rural analysis indicating the root causes of deforestation and the role education can play to slow down habitat loss; third, the highlighting of some elements indispensable to reform and to subsequent improvement of the quality of rural schooling.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 250
Year
2004
ISBN (PDF)
9783631753576
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631526071
DOI
10.3726/b13879
Open Access
CC-BY
Language
English
Publication date
2018 (September)
Keywords
Forstwirtschaft Wirtschaftswachstum Wirtschaftliches Wachstum Natürliche Ressourcen Zentralamerika Armut Guatemala Bildungspolitik Biodiversität
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2004. XVIII, 250 pp., 19 fig., 38 tables

Biographical notes

Ludger Löning (Author)

The Author: Ludger J. Löning is presently working at an international financial institution in Washington D.C. He majored in economics and international relations at the Dresden University of Technology, l’Université Pierre Mendès France at Grenoble, and the University of Trier. After working three years as a researcher for the Ibero-America Institute of the University of Göttingen, he received his Ph.D. in economics at this University in 2004. The author has visited the Latin American Region extensively and worked as a consultant in this area for various organizations.

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Title: Economic Growth, Biodiversity Conservation, and the Formation of Human Capital in a Developing Country
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270 pages