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Vocational education can be seen as an important tool in leveraging India’s demographic dividend. Given the labor surplus in terms of the young population, it is important to examine how vocational education and training can serve as a critical driver of economic growth. This study aims at examining the impact of vocational education and training on economic growth in India, using the framework of the augmented Solow growth model by decomposing human capital into vocational education, along with primary, secondary and higher education. Using an ARDL model based on the annual data from 1990 to 1991 and 2019 to 2020, the study analyzes the short-run and long-run impact of vocational education. The results indicate that in the case of India, the impact of vocational education on economic growth is both a short-run and long-run phenomenon exhibiting a stable positive relation. Other control variables used in this study, such as Investment, Population, Openness and Inflation are found with a significant impact on economic growth. The study suggests that it is necessary to upgrade vocational education programs to create high-quality workers with a view to improving productivity and macroeconomic outcomes in India.
The U.S. coronavirus recession began in late February of 2020 and was over in two months. The rapid recovery was due to the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Stability Act (CARES Act), a large fiscal stimulus program initiated in late March 2020, that was accompanied by a strong expansionary monetary policy. This paper advances the notion that although the Corona-Recession was historically short it had two more permanent—longer-run—impacts that have largely been ignored. First, it accelerated two emerging trends—expansion of remote work, and more rapid adoption of digital technologies—and each will have a profound effect on work, society, and well-being in the U.S. Second, the pandemic-fuelled downturn fostered a new pathway—loneliness and social isolation—that exacerbated the emotional health concern that is part of all recessions, especially for younger persons. This occurrence is also likely to have an enduring footprint on economic and social life.