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Research analyzing the importance of human capital for innovation usually focuses on secondary and tertiary education. This paper takes a different perspective by focusing on in‐firm training. We argue that continuous training guarantees access to leading‐edge knowledge and thus increases a firm’s propensity to innovate. Using German establishment‐level data, we show a strong association between lagged continuous training and innovation. Applying instrumental variable methods, we cautiously argue that the association between training and innovation is indeed a causal effect. In the quest for a relevant and valid instrument, we exploit legal regulations of the German Works Constitution Act.
Bauernschuster et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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