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  1. The Heckman Curve shows that the highest rate of economic returns comes from the earliest investments in children, providing an eye-opening understanding that society invests too much money in later development when it is often too late to provide great value.

    • Make Your Case on Social Media

      Make your case for early childhood development and education...

    • Presentations

      On March 23, 2015, Professor Heckman gave the keynote...

    • Portuguese

      The Heckman Curve; Early Childhood Education: Quality and...

    • Spanish

      The Heckman Curve; Early Childhood Education: Quality and...

  2. 17 de dic. de 2019 · The Heckman Curve characterizes the rate of return to public investments in human capital as rapidly diminishing with age. For the disadvantaged, it describes investments early in the life course as having significantly higher rates of return compared to later in life.

    • David Rea, Tony Burton
    • 2020
  3. The Heckman Curve describes how the rate of return for investment in the human capital of disadvantaged individuals differs by age. An early version is set out in a discussion paper about the rate of return of spending on human capital in the context of a changing US labour market during the 1990s.

  4. Professor Heckman’s research proves that starting earlier has the greatest returns. Birth-to-three advocates can use Heckman’s ROI to advance investments that begin at birth. This presentation includes a break down of Professor Heckman’s ECE research and the key policy implications.

  5. 9 de nov. de 2020 · Hear Professor Heckman discuss The Heckman Curve, showing that the highest rate of economic returns comes from the earliest investments in children.

    • 3 min
    • 9K
    • Heckman Equation
  6. In our paper we interpreted the Heckman Curve as a proposition that (a) social policy interventions targeted at early childhood would generate benefit cost ratios that were higher than other age groups, and (b) interventions targeted at older age groups would often have benefits smaller than their costs (Rea and Burton, 2020). Our ...

  7. The Heckman Curve characterizes the rate of return to public investments in human capital as rapidly diminishing with age. For the disadvantaged, it describes investments early in the life course as having significantly higher rates of return compared to later in life.