1,301 results on '"returns to education"'
Search Results
2. All about the money? The gendered effect of education on industrial and occupational sorting
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Lepinteur, Anthony and Nieto, Adrián
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- 2025
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3. Does signaling college-level human capital matter? An experimental study in India
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Batheja, Deepshikha, Hirshleifer, Sarojini, and Kaur, Opinder
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labor markets ,hiring ,tertiary education ,college quality ,development ,audit study ,correspondence experiment ,higher education ,research institutions ,education and economic development ,returns to education ,labor demand ,firm employment decisions ,promotions ,Human Resources ,human development ,income distribution ,migration - Abstract
We measure the impact of two main signals of tertiary-level human capital accumulation, college quality and certification, on hiring in India. Using a correspondence experiment, we send 16,944 resumes to 1412 job postings for recent engineering graduates at small and medium firms. In precisely estimated results, we find that these employers do not respond to signals of tertiary education quality. Specifically, there is no impact on callbacks of having graduated from a mid-tier college ranked in the top 300 relative to an unranked college outside of the top 1000, despite significant government investment in college rankings. There is also no impact of scoring in the highest as opposed to the lowest quartile of a post-tertiary certification test that has been taken by millions of graduating students. There is evidence that women modestly benefit in the first stage of hiring in this market, with this effect concentrated in some regions.
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- 2024
4. Stairway to heaven? The economic consequences of setting foot in college in Colombia.
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Herrera-Prada, Luis Omar and Martínez-Zarzoso, Inmaculada
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GENDER wage gap , *ECONOMIC impact , *WAGE increases , *INCOME inequality , *GRADUATE education , *WAGE differentials - Abstract
This study investigates the economic consequences of college attendance on wages, focusing on the wage increases associated with obtaining a degree, highlighting the Sheepskin Effect in a country characterized by high informality and youth unemployment as Colombia. Using administrative data for secondary school graduates (2002–2012) and a differences-in-differences framework, we estimate a 50.6% wage increase for college graduates and 68.1% premium over dropouts completing 90%-of-coursework. These findings suggest that college graduation is associated with reduced income inequality and a narrower gender wage gap, providing insights for policymakers on the benefits of promoting higher education to improve labor market outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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5. RETURNS TO EDUCATION AND ROLE OF OVEREDUCATION IN UKRAINE: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS.
- Author
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Brintseva, Olena
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BUSINESS size ,HUMAN capital ,ECONOMICS education ,WORK experience (Employment) ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The growing impact of human capital and education on economic development is driving up the returns to education in most countries in the Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). The empirical results are based on microdata from the enterprise surveys. The State Statistics Service of Ukraine has conducted a study on the level of wages of employees by gender, age, education and occupational categories. The results show that returns to education in Ukraine are also gradually increasing. In 2012, the return was 8.7%, in 2016 it was 7.8% and in 2020 it was 9.2% for each additional year of study (8.6% on average). However, this indicator remains below the average for most countries in the Central and Eastern Europe. The wage premium for each additional year of university education in Ukraine was 11.8% in 2012, 10.4% in 2016 and 11.7% in 2020. A review of the impact of various factors (work experience, years of education, level of education, gender, place of residence, size of the enterprise) on remuneration levels reveals that the largest positive impact on earnings is associated with complete university education, a large enterprise size and place of residence in the capital city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Disparity in Educational Participation in the Lenses of Educational Returns and Family Background: Evidence from India.
- Author
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Ray Chaudhury, Anjan, Sarkar, Sreemanta, and Sinha, Madhabendra
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DISCRIMINATION in education , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL background , *SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
The paper attempts to investigate the origin of inequality in educational participation across Indian social groups in terms of inequality in the expected monetary educational returns and other demand-side factors responsible behind educational decision. We employ the binary logit model of regression for the accomplishment of the objective of this study. In addition, we decompose the discrepancy in educational participation into 'response effect' and 'attribute effect' to examine whether there is any discrimination in educational participation against the members of the disadvantaged social groups. JEL Classification: I21, I24, I26 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Do Human Capital Adjustments Protect Youths from Structural Change?
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Smith, Tucker
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HUMAN capital ,YOUTH development ,STUDENT attitudes ,LABOR demand - Abstract
Structural changes to labor demand can have lasting consequences on the employment and earnings of workers in affected industries and geographies. However, individuals coming of age may avoid similar fates if they internalize salient changes to the returns to education and adjust their human capital investments. This paper studies the effects of exposure to structural labor demand shocks during youth and adolescence on human capital accumulation and later-life earnings. I use student-level administrative data from Texas and a modified difference-in-differences design that compares changes in outcomes across cohorts of students living in areas that were more or less exposed to Chinese import competition. Students exposed to larger shocks were 4% more likely to enroll in college and 8% more likely to earn a bachelor's degree. I provide evidence that these adjustments, along with shifts of fields of study away from those directly exposed to import competition in both high school and college, shielded students from more than 90% of the shock's negative effects on later-life earnings. My results contribute a silver lining to the gloomy findings of prior work on the long-term effects of "the China shock" and other negative labor demand shocks: if individuals coming of age sufficiently adjust their human capital investments, they can emerge relatively unscathed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
8. Returns to different levels of education in Russia
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Dolgikh, Sofiia and Potanin, Bogdan
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- 2024
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9. An investigation of the decline in the returns to higher education in Vietnam.
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Banh, Thi Hang, Dao, Trang Hong, Glewwe, Paul, and Thai, Giang
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RATE of return , *HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *FOREIGN investments , *LABOR supply - Abstract
Vietnam's economy and education system have had remarkable success in recent decades, yet there are concerns about the declining returns to higher education since 2008. We document this decline in returns to higher education and propose four hypotheses to explain it. Analysis of the VLSS/VHLSS and LFS data provides little evidence for three of four hypotheses. The fourth hypothesis is that changes in the demand for highly educated labor in Vietnam, perhaps due to recent changes in foreign direct investment inflows, rather than the labor supply, are perhaps the most important determinant of the returns to education across different levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. College rankings, labor market outcomes, and alumni satisfaction.
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Bettinger, Eric and Fidjeland, Andreas
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UNIVERSITY rankings , *LABOR market , *RATE of return , *ECONOMIC models , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education - Abstract
State and federal governments invest millions of dollars in providing accurate and relevant information on expected outcomes to students pursuing higher education, but whether such information targets what students value about college is unclear. We use new survey data to identify the extent to which conventional indicators for college quality and returns correlate with collegegoers' satisfaction with their education. We find that alumni are on average very satisfied with their education, even among those with poor labor market outcomes. Our results suggest the consumptive value of higher education is much higher than economic models of college choices typically assume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Returns to education in Greece: adjusting to large wage cuts.
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Cholezas, Ioannis and Kanellopoulos, Nikolaos C.
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HOUSEHOLDS , *RATE of return , *WAGE decreases , *PARENTING education - Abstract
This paper estimates returns to education during a period of sharp wage cuts in Greece, considering both the endogenous nature of education and women's self-selection. Findings suggest that dramatic wage declines were followed by sharp decreases in returns to education, while the documented convergence of returns between genders is an added benefit. Once endogeneity is examined, using parental education and number of siblings in the household as instruments, and self-selection is accounted for, returns to education almost double compared to OLS. These findings are verified using several robustness tests and alternative specifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Returns to education in Nepal: an analysis of educational attainment, employability and social mobility.
- Author
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Thapa, Amrit and Izawa, Moe
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EDUCATIONAL attainment , *RATE of return , *EMPLOYABILITY , *SOCIAL mobility , *INCOME inequality - Abstract
This study examines the impact of educational attainment on employment and earnings in Nepal. Using the Nepal Labour Force Survey 2017–2018 cycle, we employ an extended earnings function derived from the foundational Mincer equation to estimate returns to education. The results underscore the overall positive impact of education (1.76, 3.73, 7.68 and 11.00% increase in earnings by primary, secondary, bachelor's and master's degrees, respectively), which is lower than the average observed in other low– and middle– income countries, except in higher education. The results also indicate persisting disparities for females and disadvantaged groups. The study emphasizes the need for strategic interventions, improved educational infrastructure and inclusive policies to foster equitable opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Updates on private returns to education in Uganda: evidence from universal primary education policy.
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Sakaue, Katsuki, Wokadala, James, and Ogawa, Keiichi
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PRIMARY education , *EDUCATION policy , *LABOR market , *INCOME , *LIQUIDITY (Economics) - Abstract
This study updates private returns to education in Uganda using consumption measures as an outcome variable, focusing on obtaining estimates using instrumental variables based on the introduction of the universal primary education policy. Unlike common findings from developed countries, the evidence from this study for a low-income country suggests that returns to education are smaller for liquidity-constrained individuals than for average individuals. The finding also suggests that smaller returns are observed for self-employed farmers than self-employed workers in non-agricultural sectors. The trend, showing smaller returns for liquidity-constrained individuals, is particularly obvious among self-employed farmers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. What makes a successful artist?
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Kuntz, Melissa, Vick, Brandon, Anderson, John A., and Heckert, Alex
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MUSEUM exhibits , *RACE , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *GENDER inequality , *MODERN art - Abstract
This study seeks to identify which factors of an artist’s background and demographic characteristics (age, race, gender, education, location as a child, and family SES) correlate with successful career outcomes (quality of gallery representation, representation in museum exhibitions and collections). Using a sample of 930 artists, created by random sampling from a catalog of represented artists merged with public data on demographic, SES, and educational backgrounds, we conducted a multivariate analysis on differences in artist outcome. Findings suggest a substantial female penalty in gallery representation and museum exhibitions. While an education premium exists, measured by attending top-tier BFA/MFA programs, it does not affect all artists similarly – female artists do not receive gains in the same way that male artists do, while artists from lower SES backgrounds are less likely to attend such programs. We also find that previous cohorts of artists are more established in the modern art world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Restoring culture and capital to cultural capital: origin–destination cultural distance and immigrant earnings in the United States.
- Author
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He, Qian, Gerber, Theodore P., and Xie, Yu
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CULTURAL capital , *SOCIOLOGY literature , *CROSS-cultural differences , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
An extensive sociological literature maintains that cultural capital is pivotal in perpetuating social inequalities. However, empirical tests of cultural capital theory focus on how culture influences educational outcomes, not earnings, and they mainly look for cultural differences across social classes within societies. We propose a direct test of economic returns to cultural capital based instead on differences in national cultures across countries. Using the American Community Survey and the National Survey of College Graduates, we analyze the relationship between immigrants' lack of U.S.-specific cultural capital, proxied by cultural distance between the origin country and the U.S., and their earnings. Findings consistently indicate that origin – U.S. cultural distance is linked to immigrants' lower earnings after controlling for numerous other factors, supporting cultural capital theory. Cultural distance earnings penalties are more pronounced for immigrants with at least a bachelor's degree, those arriving in adulthood, and those with foreign degrees. Moreover, county-level analysis reveals more sizable cultural distance penalties in more competitive and unequal labour markets, highlighting how subnational receiving contexts shape origin-country disparities in immigrants' economic incorporation at their destinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Winner-takes-all : access to education and labor market returns in the Philippines
- Author
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Yee, Karol Mark, Rose, Pauline, and Gruijters, Rob
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educational expansion ,educational inequalities ,higher education ,Philippines ,returns to education ,social mobility - Abstract
This thesis seeks to understand how inequalities in access to education and labor market returns have evolved over time in the Philippines. Using the Origin-Education-Destination (OED) triangle as frame (see for example, Breen & Goldthorpe, 1997; Breen & Jonsson, 2005; Bukodi & Goldthorpe, 2018), the study disentangles the extent to which social background continues to influence educational attainment and labor market returns, while analyzing the contemporary role of higher education in eliminating or amplifying inequities. The study is critical for three reasons. First, access to education expanded steadily in the Philippines since the 1940s, akin to the experience of many other systems following the Second World War. The recent surge in higher education enrolment however is unprecedented, and likely to accelerate given legislation in 2018 to abolish tuition in all public higher education institutions. Second, this massification in access occurred through intense public provision, in a country known to have one of the largest private higher education systems in the world (Levy, 2018) where cost is known to rise with quality (A. Orbeta, 2002). Third, sustained educational expansions were paralleled by a less robust course of economic development, marked by the country's protracted transition from agriculture to industry since the 1950s, and punctuated by severe economic recessions and overall volatility. Taking advantage of available data from the Philippine government and the World Bank (STEP Skills Survey), the thesis employs a quantitative approach to estimate trends in educational attainment and labor market returns, as they relate to higher education characteristics. This is an area unexplored by current research in the Philippines, despite its likely consequences on equity considering the diversity of the 2,396 higher education institutions in the country. The study further interrogates whether the prevalent belief that expanding access to education could promote equality of opportunity and enable intergenerational mobility-- as observed in many industrial economies, and prescribed as a model for modern growth following the Second World War-- is operable in the case of a lower middle-income country like the Philippines. The first empirical chapter of this thesis studies the relationship between social origins and educational attainment (O-E). Specifically, it investigates whether sustained expansions in access between 1945 to 2015 contributed towards diminishing the role of social background on educational attainment, consistent with findings elsewhere. The second empirical chapter then probes how these expansions impacted private returns to education of graduates (E-D), inquiring whether the recent surge in higher education enrolment depressed returns as proposed by Human Capital Theory. Finally, the third empirical chapter examines the "equalizing power" of a college degree in the Philippine context, assessing the extent to which higher education mediates the relationship between origins and destinations (O-D). More importantly, the chapter provides a first look at how higher education characteristics relate to the likelihood of disadvantaged graduates reaching "middle-income" status in the Philippines. The analysis finds that educational expansions were unable to mitigate inequities in attainment in the country, with social background continuing to relate strongly to secondary and higher education completion. Further, contrary to the expectation that educational expansions would alter the composition of the labor market and lead to a drastic decline in returns, the study finds that recent trends relate mainly to the shift in economic opportunities from agriculture to services. Notably, while inequities in returns narrowed among graduates with varying levels of educational attainment between 2005 and 2019, the thesis discovers that inequities worsened among college graduates, with high-wage workers accruing substantially larger returns than their low-wage peers-a striking contrast from a previous study in 2010. Against this backdrop, the study finds that the "equalizing power" of a college degree is apparent, but only for first- generation college graduates of public and non-profit, "high-status" institutions. For said graduates, a college degree appears to negate the disadvantage related to social origins once in the labor market, as found in literature elsewhere. For the bulk however completing in "regular" institutions, higher education appears unable to support upward mobility, with early-career graduates unlikely to accrue similar returns as their advantaged peers, and unlikely to reach "middle-income" status, despite completing college. Overall, the thesis finds that opportunities remain unequal in the Philippines, with social origins remaining strongly associated to both educational attainment and labor market outcomes. The study also finds that higher education has a "stratifying" instead of an "equalizing" effect in the country, intensifying the role of social background when it comes to returns. The thesis concludes by offering recommendations aimed at improving the progressiveness of government policies and programs. These include supporting disadvantaged students in completing secondary education and gaining admission in "high-status" colleges and universities, strengthening the capacity of the Commission on Higher Education in regulating and supporting the country's exceptionally diverse higher education sector, as well as focusing on the creation of high-skill jobs.
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- 2023
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17. The employment effects of the disability education gap in Europe.
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Albinowski, Maciej, Magda, Iga, and Rozszczypała, Agata
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PEOPLE with disabilities , *POSTSECONDARY education , *OVERWEIGHT persons , *AGE groups , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
We investigate the contribution of the disability education gap to the disability employment gap in the European Union. We find that educational attainment is a major factor determining the probability of employment among persons with disabilities and that the employment effects of tertiary education are much larger among persons with disabilities than among non-disabled people. We also uncover substantial heterogeneity in the role of education across countries. Overall, we estimate that 19% of the disability employment gap in the 25–34 age group can be attributed to the gap in education between individuals with and without disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Heterogeneity in Labor Market Returns to Master's Degrees: Evidence from Ohio.
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Minaya, Veronica, Scott-Clayton, Judith, and Zhou, Rachel Yang
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MASTER'S degree , *FIXED effects model , *GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 , *ECONOMICS education , *GRADUATE education - Abstract
Graduate education is among the fastest growing segments of the U.S. higher educational system. This paper estimates the returns to Master's degrees and examines heterogeneity in the returns by field area, student demographics and initial labor market conditions. We use rich administrative data from Ohio and an individual fixed effects model that compares students' earnings trajectories before and after earning a Master's degree. Findings show that obtaining a Master's degree increased quarterly earnings by about 14% on average, but the returns vary largely across graduate fields. We also find gender and racial disparities in the returns, with higher average returns for women than for men, and for White than for Black graduates. In addition, by comparing returns among students who graduated before and under the Great Recession, we show that economic downturns appear to reduce but not eliminate the positive returns to Master's degrees. There are important variations in the returns to Master's degrees during the recession across field area and race/ethnicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Schooling opportunities for 5-year-olds: some early origins of high school achievement.
- Author
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Ali, Asaad Ismail and Menclova, Andrea Kutinova
- Abstract
In many countries, school attendance starts on a fixed date. In contrast, New Zealand uses rolling admissions and children can start school throughout the year, right after their fifth birthday. However, children turning five during a school holiday need to wait until the start of the following teaching term. This system generates an exogenous variation in the amount of time spent in primary school and enables us to estimate the causal effects of early schooling, independent from the effects of age. Using rich microdata on all high school leavers in New Zealand from 2009 to 2016, we find that an additional month of early schooling increases the probability of achieving a top high school certificate by 6% and qualifying for university entrance by 5%. These are large long-term effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Disuguaglianze territoriali e ritorni dell'istruzione: Un'analisi del dualismo Nord-Sud e delle differenze tra aree centrali e marginali in Italia.
- Author
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PANICHELLA, NAZARENO, CANTALINI, STEFANO, AVOLA, MAURIZIO, and PICCITTO, GIORGIO
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Classical research on returns to education has systematically shown that individuals with more schooling are more likely to have higher earnings, prestige, social status, etc. Few studies focused on the role of spatial arrangements and geographical inequalities in this debate, despite most developed societies experience growing territorial disparities. In this respect, Italy has been experiencing large disparities between 'central' and 'marginal' areas, which go beyond the classic rural/urban and North/South cleavages. This work aims at studying if and how returns to education differ between 'central' and 'marginal' areas in Italy. Analyses based on the Italian Labour Force Survey (2009-2020) show that tertiary educated living in Northern provinces earn much more than those living in provinces located in the South or in the Islands. Moreover, the higher the marginality of a province (i.e., the larger the proportion of population of a province living in 'marginal' municipalities), the lower the returns to tertiary education. However, large part of this association is explained by the North-South divide. Therefore, the cleavage between marginal and central areas is crucial and cumulates with the North-South one. The penalization of tertiary educated living in marginal areas occurs only in an already disadvantaged context (South), whereas more advantaged contexts (North) are likely to have characteristics that compensate for the penalization given by the geographical marginality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
21. Male investment in schooling with frictional labour and marriage markets.
- Author
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Bonilla, Roberto and Kiraly, Francis
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LABOR market ,JOB hunting ,MARKET equilibrium ,UNEMPLOYED people ,ECONOMIES of scale ,MALES - Abstract
We present an equilibrium model with inter-linked frictional labour and marriage markets. Women's flow value of being single is treated as given, and it captures returns from employment. Men can undertake a costly ex-ante investment in schooling. In the marriage market, women search sequentially for men characterised by wages, so they use a reservation value strategy. Single unemployed men conduct marital sequential search and, with an eye on the marriage market, also conduct a so-called constrained sequential job search. Given this setup, schooling enhances men's marriage prospects as well as their labour market returns. In turn, women's behaviour affects men's schooling investment decision and their optimal job search strategy. We establish that for any given set of parameters, there exists a unique market equilibrium where a fraction of men get educated, and show that this fraction decreases if women's labour market returns increase. We also examine the robustness of such an equilibrium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. A decomposition method to evaluate the 'paradox of progress', with evidence for Argentina.
- Author
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Alejo, Javier, Gasparini, Leonardo, Montes-Rojas, Gabriel, and Sosa-Escudero, Walter
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DECOMPOSITION method ,QUANTILE regression ,PARADOX ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
The 'paradox of progress' is an empirical regularity that associates more education with larger income inequality. Two driving and competing factors behind this phenomenon are the convexity of the 'Mincer equation' (that links wages and education) and the heterogeneity in the returns to education, as captured by quantile regressions. We propose a joint least-squares and quantile regression statistical framework to derive a decomposition to evaluate the relative contribution of each explanation. We apply the proposed decomposition strategy to the case of Argentina 1992 to 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Scars of pandemics from lost schooling and experience: aggregate implications and gender differences through the lens of COVID-19
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Romer, Paul, Samaniego, Roberto, Jedwab, Remi, and Islam, Asif M.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Subjective expectations and schooling choices in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Gantier, Marcelo, Novella, Rafael, and Repetto, Andrea
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SCHOOL choice ,EXPECTED returns ,LABOR market ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POSTSECONDARY education - Abstract
Expectations about future labour market opportunities are essential for education and labour market decisions. This paper uses data from a survey of youths in seven Latin American and Caribbean countries to explore the role of expected returns to education on schooling decisions. We find substantial variation in subjective expectations partly explained by youths' socioeconomic characteristics. Also, we find that enrolment in tertiary education is positively related to perceived education returns. Furthermore, the association of expectations with schooling choices differs across individuals in relevant domains, including gender, skills, and socioeconomic background. Our results suggest that public policies might impact choices and reduce socioeconomic gaps in schooling by providing information on education returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Should I Stay or Should I Go Pro? Early NFL Draft Entry by NCAA FBS Underclassmen.
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Humphreys, Brad R., Chikish, Yulia, and von Allmen, Peter
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Some college players face the tradeoff between continuing their education and entering the draft and forfeiting college eligibility. Little empirical research focuses on this "stay or go pro" decision. We analyze early draft entry decisions made by college football underclassmen with remaining eligibility over the 2007/08-2018/19 seasons. Regression results support both the human capital explanation for early draft entry in that players acquiring more human capital in the previous season by playing in more games increases the likelihood of early entry and the option value perspective in that playing on a more successful team increases the likelihood of early entry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Education-Job Mismatch and Heterogeneity in the Return to Schooling: Evidence from Cameroon.
- Author
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Njifen, Issofou and Smith, Peter
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This study aims to analyze the education-job mismatch effect on the return to education in Cameroon, by using data on employment provided by the National Institute of Statistics. Based on Verdugo and Verdugo's model estimate, we use several types of regression models to examine both the heterogeneity in returns to education derived from education-job mismatch and the choice of different types of selection model. Results show that overeducation is associated with a wage penalty while undereducation leads to a wage premium. With each year of schooling, differences in earning are significant between overeducated, undereducated, and well-matched people. They also show a substantial difference in the magnitude of coefficients with respect to the control variables for different types of selection model. This difference observed across different models implies that the estimation of returns to schooling is highly sensitive to the model's specification. Beyond other contributions, this study highlights the need to exercise a fair degree of care in the choice of an appropriate model for analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Inequality and social stratification in Russia during the Putin regime: From market transition to war on Ukraine.
- Author
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Gerber, Theodore P. and Gimpelson, Vladimir
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SOCIAL stratification ,RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,SOCIAL science research ,GENDER wage gap ,INCOME inequality ,EQUAL pay for equal work ,PAY for performance - Abstract
The collapse of the USSR in late 1991 inspired social science research on levels, patterns, and trends in inequality within Russia, due to theoretical interest in how market transition affects social stratification. The start of the Putin regime in 2000 marked a new era in Russia's post‐Soviet political economic trajectory: in contrast to the 1990s, the economy first took off, then stagnated, while the state rolled back institutions of democracy and civic freedoms. In short, Russia became a consolidated market economy under authoritarian rule. In this context research has continued to produce insights into social stratification. The labor market featured high levels of employment but with downward wage flexibility, modest decreases in earnings inequality, and persistent returns to education, gender wage gaps, and locality‐based differences. Waves of labor migration to Russia, resurgent traditional gender norms, shrinking population, housing inequality, health disparities, and a small contingent of ultra‐rich represent additional noteworthy developments. Although market transition is no longer an intriguing theoretical lens through which to view social stratification in Russia, the topic nonetheless holds broader theoretical interest because inequality became closely intertwined with Russia's political economy, social policies, and geopolitical actions, including those that culminated in Putin's decision to invade Ukraine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. From Combining Study and Work to Combining Work and Study? The Changing Model of Russian Higher Education
- Author
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Ksenia V. Rozhkova, Sergey Yu. Roshchin, and Pavel V. Travkin
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combining study and work ,student employment ,graduate labour market ,early career ,graduate employability ,returns to education ,starting wages ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Combining study and work has become a widespread phenomenon in Russia. According to the national monitoring of graduate employment, about 53% of full-time bachelor and specialist degree holders worked for at least one month during their studies. The article presents a comprehensive analysis of the characteristics of combining study and work and an assessment of their contribution to individual wages and the probability of employment one year after graduation. The results suggest that regular employment during the academic year is more common than temporary employment during the summer break. On average, combining study and work increases the probability of employment one year after graduation by 16-19% and brings a wage premium of 14%. However, there are significant differences in the size of the effect depending on the characteristics of student employment and educational factors. The combination of studying and working in the final years of university has a larger effect on wages and the probability of employment. There are significant cross effects between the fact of combining study and work with fields of study and the degree of university selectivity. The observed effects suggest that a special model of transition from study to work has emerged in Russia, in which professional career entry precedes graduation. Moreover, the results of the study show that there is a strong complementarity between education and combining study with work. Combining study and work does not yield significant returns when the quality of education is low, while success in the labour market is achieved through a combination of different educational factors and not solely work experience.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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29. Early career gender wage gaps among university graduates in Russia
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Rudakov, Victor, Kiryushina, Margarita, Figueiredo, Hugo, and Teixeira, Pedro Nuno
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Intersection of Gender and Disability on Returns to Education: A Case from Metro Manila, Philippines
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Kamal Lamichhane and Takayuki Watanabe
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returns to education ,disability ,gender ,labor-market participation ,Philippines ,Personnel management. Employment management ,HF5549-5549.5 - Abstract
Utilizing a dataset from Metro Manila in the Philippines, we estimate the impact of gender on the return of education for individuals with disabilities, specifically focusing on visual, hearing, and walking difficulties. Controlling sample selection to address endogenous labor participation and accounting for the endogeneity of schooling decisions, our estimations reveal a significant rate of return to education, ranging from 25.7% to 38.1%. Importantly, examining the potential for nonlinear-schooling return, we observe a more pronounced effect of disability for females compared to their male counterparts, suggesting the presence of dual discrimination and signaling effects for females. Our research emphasizes the urgency for the Philippine government to not only improve educational opportunities but also to enhance employment prospects, particularly for females with disabilities. Some of the policy recommendations would include the implementation of equal-opportunity measures, including antidiscrimination policies; an expanded quota system to boost employment opportunities; efforts to address accessibility issues; and subsidies for private-sector employment are also necessary for the economic empowerment of females with disabilities.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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31. Studying abroad experience and the wages of females.
- Author
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Asankulova, Zhanylai and Thomsen, Stephan
- Subjects
- *
INVESTMENTS , *HUMAN capital , *GRADUATE students , *EMPIRICAL research , *SOCIAL capital - Abstract
Studying abroad acts as investment in human capital and ideally outweighs associated investment costs due to higher earnings or related non-monetary benefits. We estimate monetary returns to studying abroad for female graduates 1 and 5 years after graduation. The empirical estimates—based on panel data from four graduate cohorts in 1997, 2001, 2005, and 2009—confirm positive returns to studying abroad. Mobile females earn 3.2% higher wages compared to non-mobiles at labor market entry. These initial wage gains tend to improve further over time, resulting in about 4.0% higher earnings for mobile females 5 years after graduation. Detailed consideration of different socio-economic groups reveals that female graduates from non-academic backgrounds and females majoring in social sciences benefit most. Studying abroad, therefore, has positive effects on later income of female graduates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Value of U.S. College Education in Global Labor Markets: Experimental Evidence from China.
- Author
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Chen, Mingyu
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,LABOR market ,BEHAVIORAL economics ,JOB fairs ,CHINA-United States relations - Abstract
One million international students study in the United States each year, and the majority of them compete in global labor markets after graduation. I conducted a large-scale field experiment and a companion employer survey to study how employers in China value U.S. college education. I sent more than 27,000 fictitious online applications to business and computer science jobs in China, randomizing the country of college education. I find that U.S.-educated applicants are on average 18% less likely to receive a callback than applicants educated in China, with applicants from very selective U.S. institutions underperforming those from the least selective Chinese institutions. The United States-China callback gap is smaller at high-wage jobs, consistent with employers fearing U.S.-educated applicants have better outside options and would be harder to hire and retain. The gap is also smaller at foreign-owned firms, consistent with Chinese-owned firms knowing less about American education. Controlling for high school quality, test scores, or U.S. work experiences does not attenuate the gap, suggesting that the gap is not driven by employer perceptions of negative selection. A survey of 507 hiring managers at college career fairs finds consistent and additional supporting evidence for the experimental findings. This paper was accepted by Yan Chen, behavioral economics and decision analysis. Funding: This work was supported by the Industrial Relations Section at Princeton University and the Prize Fellowship in Social Sciences awarded by Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendices are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4745. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Retornos privados a la educación para trabajadores del sector comercial en Popayán, Colombia.
- Author
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Caiza, Jorge Giraldo and Gómez-Sánchez, Andrés Mauricio
- Subjects
GENERALIZED method of moments ,PRIVATE education ,MOTHERS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,VENEZUELANS ,RETURN migrants - Abstract
Copyright of Revista En-Contexto is the property of Tecnologico de Antioquia, Institucion Universitari and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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34. Revisiting the causal effect of education on political participation and interest.
- Author
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Bömmel, Nadja and Heineck, Guido
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL participation , *PRESSURE groups , *COMPULSORY education , *HIGH school equivalency examinations , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Many studies suggest a relationship between education and political participation, but only some address causality. We add to this by re-examining the German case. For identification, we exploit an exogenous increase in compulsory schooling, and use data from the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). The data enable analyses that do not rely solely on the conversion of school-leaving qualifications into schooling duration but use the individuals' actual length of schooling as part of their educational biographies. Our results indicate that the well-known association between education and political participation partially reflects causal effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Revisiting Returns to Education in Thailand: Structural Causal Model Framework.
- Author
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Sirisrisakulchai, Jirakom and Leurcharusmee, Supanika
- Subjects
- *
CAUSAL models , *STRUCTURAL models , *HOUSEHOLD surveys , *SELECTION bias (Statistics) - Abstract
This paper revisits the causal relationship between education and earnings, or the returns to education, using Thailand's socio-economic household survey data. We show that, with the minimum modeling assumption, the causal effect of education on earnings can be nonparametrically identified only when there is no unobserved ability affecting both education and earning, and when the selection mechanisms are conditionally independent to earnings conditioning on potential experience and education. The causal effects of education on earnings are estimated using a nonparametric approach with selection bias adjustment and parametric approaches with selection bias and ability bias adjustments. The results show different estimates for returns to education across model specifications, indicating the importance of the bias adjustments and parametric assumptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Intersection of Gender and Disability on Returns to Education: A Case from Metro Manila, Philippines.
- Author
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Lamichhane, Kamal and Watanabe, Takayuki
- Subjects
JOB descriptions ,TEACHERS ,ALPHA (Finance) ,INVESTMENT analysis ,BRAZILIANS - Abstract
Utilizing a dataset from Metro Manila in the Philippines, we estimate the impact of gender on the return of education for individuals with disabilities, specifically focusing on visual, hearing, and walking difficulties. Controlling sample selection to address endogenous labor participation and accounting for the endogeneity of schooling decisions, our estimations reveal a significant rate of return to education, ranging from 25.7% to 38.1%. Importantly, examining the potential for nonlinear-schooling return, we observe a more pronounced effect of disability for females compared to their male counterparts, suggesting the presence of dual discrimination and signaling effects for females. Our research emphasizes the urgency for the Philippine government to not only improve educational opportunities but also to enhance employment prospects, particularly for females with disabilities. Some of the policy recommendations would include the implementation of equal-opportunity measures, including antidiscrimination policies; an expanded quota system to boost employment opportunities; efforts to address accessibility issues; and subsidies for private-sector employment are also necessary for the economic empowerment of females with disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. When to use matching and weighting or regression in instrumental variable estimation? Evidence from college proximity and returns to college.
- Author
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Tübbicke, Stefan
- Subjects
LABOR economics ,LABOR market ,LEAST squares ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Standard two-stage least squares (2SLS) regression remains dominant in instrumental variables estimation of causal effects even though the literature has shown that 2SLS may be inconsistent when effects are heterogenous and the instrument is only valid when conditioning on covariates. To show that this is not merely a hypothetical threat, this paper re-estimates the returns to college using college proximity as an instrument based on the data from Card (Aspects of labour market behavior: essays in honour of John Vanderkamp, University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1995). The results show that 2SLS yields systematically larger estimates of the returns to college than more flexible estimators based on the instrument propensity score. In the full sample, differences amount to about 50 to 100%. This is due to the implicit conditional-variance weighting performed by 2SLS. Moreover, in line with the theoretical prediction by Sloczynski (When should we (not) interpret linear IV estimands as LATE? IZA discussion papers 14349, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), 2021), findings suggest that the impact of the conditional-variance weighting is larger when instrument groups are not roughly the same size. Thus, it is advised to use 2SLS with caution and use estimators based on the instrument propensity score instead when groups are of different size and covariates are predictive of the instrument. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Effects of Advanced Degrees on the Wage Rates, Hours, Earnings, and Job Satisfaction of Women and Men
- Author
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Altonji, Joseph G., Humphries, John Eric, and Zhong, Ling
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Einkommen mit Bachelorabschluss: Gibt es langfristige Unterschiede zwischen Hochschultypen?
- Author
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Satilmis, Sarah, Reimer, Maike, Deutsches Zentrum für Hochschul- und Wissenschaftsforschung GmbH, Ordemann, Jessica, editor, Peter, Frauke, editor, and Buchholz, Sandra, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Difference Between the Average Score at the National Assessment Examination and the Average Score in Lower Secondary School Cycle – a Comparative Analysis for Romania Between 2019-2022
- Author
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Octavian Ceban, Ionela-Roxana Petcu, and Andreea Mirica
- Subjects
returns to education ,national examinations ,lower secondary school ,Business ,HF5001-6182 ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
Education is the one of the corner-stones of a society and as long as this is not consolidated in the rural environment, nothing endures. Our research aims to explore the difference between the average score from national assessment examination and the average score in lower secondary school cycle. As such, a research variable, the “score discrepancy” is employed. The findings show that that the average score at the National Evaluation exam is lower than the average score after completing the lower-secondary educational cycle. Furthermore, the ANOVA test results for the score discrepancy in 2022 and three years before, and by year and area of residency followed by year and sex reveal that there is a statistically significant difference between the series. The results for Romania depict that more effort has to be done in the education for the rural pupils to catch up the results of their counterparts.
- Published
- 2023
41. An Assessment of the Relevance of the Mincerian Equation: The Case of Mauritius
- Author
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Taruna Shalini Ramessur and Neha Jugessur
- Subjects
Pooled OLS ,Endogeneity ,Pseudo-panel ,Returns to education ,Mincerian equation ,Mauritius ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
This paper assesses the relevance of the Mincerian Equation in Mauritius. Using CMPHS data, the basic equation is augmented to cater for wage responsiveness to changes across different schooling levels. However, the use of the standard linear regression method does not take into consideration the endogeneity of the variable years of schooling and sample selection bias. The IV2SLS Method is adopted, using region as an instrument. The Heckit model is further adopted to address the problem of sample selection bias. This study also employs pseudo panel models as an alternative to IV2SLS as a weak instrument may significantly impact results.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Returns to education revisited: Evidence from rural Vietnam
- Author
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Dai Binh Tran
- Subjects
Vietnam ,returns to education ,rural ,panel data ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
AbstractThis study revisits returns to education in three Vietnamese rural provinces, using data on seven waves between 2007 and 2017, taken from the Thailand Vietnam SocioEconomic Panel (TVSEP). We deploy various approaches to address the endogeneity problem, and the findings show that individuals with a lower secondary school diploma are likely to earn a higher wage income. The present research also provides evidence of heterogeneity in the rate of return in terms of sex and ethnicity. In particular, men need a lower secondary school diploma, while women require an upper secondary school diploma to improve their wage income. Similarly, the relationship between a lower secondary school diploma and wage income is found among the majority of the Kinh people, but ethnic minorities do not enjoy this benefit. Overall, the benefits of education are crucial among the labor force, especially for vulnerable groups, such as women and ethnic minorities, who would benefit from the support of policymakers.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Hidden schooling: endogenous measurement error and bias in education and labor market experience.
- Author
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Kennedy, Kendall J.
- Subjects
- *
MEASUREMENT errors , *LABOR market , *SCHOOL dropouts , *EDUCATION marketing , *RELATIONSHIP marketing , *MARKETING education , *GRADE repetition - Abstract
Since 1980, 25% of US students repeated a grade during their academic career. Despite this, few economists account for retention when measuring education and experience, causing bias when retention is correlated with other regressors of interest. Rising minimum dropout ages since 1960 have increased retention, causing positive bias in 2SLS estimates of the returns to education. Retention also causes endogenous measurement error in potential experience. In addition to distorting experience-wage profiles across countries, this endogenous measurement error causes the residual Black-White wage gap and the returns to a high school diploma to be overstated. Proxying for age instead of potential experience reduces this bias, suggesting age, not potential experience, should be a standard control variable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The returns to education and wage penalty from overeducation: New evidence from Vietnam.
- Author
-
Tran, Dai Binh and Paweenawat, Sasiwimon Warunsiri
- Subjects
WAGE differentials ,VIETNAMESE people ,QUANTILE regression ,INCOME distribution ,WAGES ,RATE of return - Abstract
This study intends to estimate the rate of returns to education in Vietnam, the distributive effects of education on wages, and the wage penalty from the incidence of overeducation in the Vietnamese labor market during 2004–2016. This study employs a pseudo‐panel approach to address omitted variables bias and the unconditional quantile regression to identify the heterogeneity of returns to education across the income distribution. Our main finding indicates that the estimated rate of returns to education in Vietnam is approximately 6.5%, showing a downward bias from previous estimates. The returns vary across wage distributions, where a lower rate of return is observed in lower quantiles and a higher rate among those individuals at the higher quantiles. The returns to education have declined since 2008, confirming the oversupply of highly educated workers in the Vietnamese labor market with an estimated wage penalty of 17%. Government assistance measures are needed to reduce the overeducation and the wage penalty issues in the Vietnamese labor market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. All that glitters is not gold—Mixed early labour market outcomes of STEM graduates in Poland.
- Author
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Zając, Tomasz Z., Żółtak, Tomasz, Bożykowski, Marek, and Jasiński, Mikołaj
- Subjects
- *
STEM education , *LABOR market , *HIGHER education , *UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
The expansion of higher education resulted in a growing interest in post‐graduation labour market outcomes. Two conflicting narratives are present in the debate. The first focuses on the shortage of skills and the need for further expansion of the sector and seems to pertain mostly to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). The second revolves around over‐education and mismatch leading to graduate unemployment or underemployment. Such concerns pertain especially to humanities and social sciences. However, in this article, we argue that the STEM versus non‐STEM opposition on which this debate is premised is not adequate for analysing post‐graduation labour market outcomes. We leverage a unique administrative dataset comprising monthly records on the labour market status of the entire population of recent Polish university graduates (N = 161,323) to demonstrate the heterogeneity of the STEM category in terms of labour market outcomes and the limited predictive value of the field of study for those outcomes. We argue that the category is too broad and internally diverse to be used as an overarching category, especially in research meant to inform policymaking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Estimating the returns to education in a chronically depressed labour market: the case of Kosovo
- Author
-
Gashi, Ardiana and Adnett, Nicholas J.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Compulsory class attendance versus autonomy.
- Author
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Goulas, Sofoklis, Griselda, Silvia, and Megalokonomou, Rigissa
- Subjects
- *
AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *UNIVERSITY & college admission , *ACADEMIC degrees , *ATTENDANCE , *SUPPLY & demand , *SCHOOL attendance - Abstract
We estimate the effect of an increased autonomy policy for higher-performing students on short- and longer-term school outcomes. We exploit an institutional setting with high demand for autonomy. Identification comes from a nationwide natural experiment that allowed higher-achieving students to miss 44 percent more classes with parental approval. Using a difference-in-difference-in-differences approach, we find that allowing higher-achieving students to skip more classes increases their performance in subjects that matter for university admission and improves the quality of their enrolled college degree. Top-performing students and students in more academically diverse classrooms demand more autonomy when it is offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Hard and Soft Skills in Vocational Training: Experimental Evidence from Colombia.
- Author
-
Barrera-Osorio, Felipe, Kugler, Adriana, and Silliman, Mikko
- Subjects
SOFT skills ,FOOD transportation ,OCCUPATIONAL training ,SOCIAL skills ,ECONOMICS education - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of an oversubscribed job-training program on skills and labor-market outcomes using both survey and administrative data. Overall, vocational training improves labor-market outcomes, particularly by increasing formal employment. A second round of randomization evaluates how applicants to otherwise similar job-training programs are affected by the extent that hard versus soft skills are emphasized in the curriculum. Admission to a vocational program that emphasizes technical relative to social skills generates greater short-term benefits, but these relative benefits quickly disappear, putting participants in the technical training on equal footing with their peers from the soft-skill training in under a year. Results from an additional randomization suggest that offering financial support for transportation and food increases the effectiveness of the program. The program fails to improve the soft skills or broader labor-market outcomes of women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Educational expansion and shifting private returns to education: Evidence from Mozambique.
- Author
-
Jones, Sam, Sohnesen, Thomas Pave, and Trifkovic, Neda
- Subjects
PRIVATE education ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,LABOR market ,POSTWAR reconstruction ,INCOME ,INFORMAL sector - Abstract
We examine how returns to education have evolved in the context of post‐conflict reconstruction and economic growth in Mozambique over the period 1996–2015. We show that private rates of return to education have declined at lower levels of schooling, but remained stable and possibly even increased at the highest levels. Returns are increasingly convex in non‐agricultural jobs but almost flat in agriculture. Using consumption expenditure data, as opposed to income data, allows estimation of returns for the entire labour market, not just the minority in formal sector jobs. Results are robust to a wide range of specifications, including use of a pseudo‐panel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Returns in wage and employment from test scores: evidence from Vietnamese National University entrance exams 2009 and household data 2018–2020.
- Author
-
Vu, Tien Manh and Yamada, Hiroyuki
- Subjects
HIGHER education exams ,TEST scoring ,NATIONAL competency-based educational tests ,COLLEGE entrance examinations ,SCHOOL enrollment ,EMPLOYMENT ,STANDARDIZED tests - Abstract
We examine the returns to test scores from the 2009 Vietnamese National Entrance Examination to University (NEEU) of individuals born in 1991. We investigate their labour outcomes in terms of hourly wage and employment measured in 2018 or 2020. We find that a one standard deviation increase in the standardized test score on the NEEU is associated with a 9% increase in wage rate 9–11 years later. The results also suggest that mathematics test scores have a significant correlation with labour outcomes in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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