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Economics of Education Review172
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Showing 31 to 45 of 172 results Save | Export
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Garcia-Mainar, Inmaculada; Montuenga-Gomez, Victor M. – Economics of Education Review, 2009
This is a response to [Jordahl, H., Poutvaara, P., & Tuomala, J. (2009). Comment on education returns of wage earners and self-employed workers. "Economics of Education Review" 28]. We acknowledge that econometrics have improved since the time our original paper was written, so that the choice of accurate instruments is now more…
Descriptors: Economics, Foreign Countries, Wages, Education Work Relationship
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O'Gorman, Melanie – Economics of Education Review, 2010
This paper examines the relationship between contemporary racial inequality of schooling and the black-white wage gap in the U.S. In particular I ask: what policies would be effective at reducing the black-white wage gap in the U.S.? In order to address this question, I develop a model of human capital accumulation in which agents differ by race.…
Descriptors: Wages, Human Capital, Taxes, African American Education
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Long, Mark C. – Economics of Education Review, 2010
This paper estimates changes in the effects of educational attainment and college quality on three cohorts of students observed during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Consistent with most of the prior literature, I find that educational attainment and college quality raise earnings, and the magnitudes of these effects have increased over time. The…
Descriptors: Voting, Outcomes of Education, Citizen Participation, Higher Education
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Arrazola, Maria; de Hevia, Jose – Economics of Education Review, 2008
In this article, in a context of wage equations with sample selection, we propose a novel interpretation of the partial effects linked to education as additional measures of returns to education that complement the traditional one, which is directly obtained from the estimation of the wage offer equation. Using European Household Panel data for…
Descriptors: Wages, Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Case Studies
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Chiswick, Barry R.; Miller, Paul W. – Economics of Education Review, 2009
This paper uses the approach in the under/over education literature to analyze the extent of matching of educational level to occupational attainment among adult native born and foreign born men in the US, using the 2000 Census. Overeducation is found to be more common among recent labor market entrants, while undereducation is more likely among…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Labor Market, Probability, Immigration
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Jordahl, Henrik; Poutvaara, Panu; Tuomala, Juha – Economics of Education Review, 2009
In their reply to our comment, Garcia-Mainar and Montuenga-Gomez [Garcia-Mainar, I., & Montuenga-Gomez, V. M. (2009). A response to the comment on education returns of wage earners and self-employed workers. "Economics of Education Review"] did not address our fundamental criticism that they have not provided the information…
Descriptors: Criticism, Replication (Evaluation), Economics, Foreign Countries
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Groot, Wim; van den Brink, Henriette Maassen – Economics of Education Review, 2007
This paper analyses the relation between two important aspects of human capital: education and health. The contribution of our paper to the literature is three-fold: some further tests for causality in the relation between education and health are provided; it is tested whether results are affected by scale of reference bias and unobserved…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Human Capital, Children, Educational Attainment
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Menon, Maria Eliophotou – Economics of Education Review, 2008
The paper provides new estimates of the perceived rates of return to higher education in Cyprus and compares them to previous estimates for the year 1994 in the same country. Both the elaborate and the short-cut methods are used in the estimation of rates of return. The estimated rates are entered as independent variables in logistic regression…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Regression (Statistics), Educational Benefits
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Dhuey, Elizabeth; Lipscomb, Stephen – Economics of Education Review, 2008
Economists have identified a substantial adult wage premium attached to high school leadership activity. Unresolved is the extent to which it constitutes human capital acquisition or proxies for an "innate" unobserved skill. We document a determinant of high school leadership activity that is associated purely with school structure, rather than…
Descriptors: Human Capital, High Schools, Maturity (Individuals), Student Leadership
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Brown, Sarah; Taylor, Karl – Economics of Education Review, 2008
We explore the effect of bullying at school on the educational attainment of a sample of individuals drawn from the British National Child Development Study (NCDS). Our empirical findings suggest that school bullying has an adverse effect on human capital accumulation both at and beyond school. Moreover, the impact of bullying on educational…
Descriptors: Wages, Human Capital, Class Size, Bullying
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Stratton, Leslie S.; O'Toole, Dennis M.; Wetzela, James N. – Economics of Education Review, 2008
Studies of college attrition typically assume that all attrition is permanent. We use data from the 1990/94 Beginning Postsecondary Survey to distinguish between long-term dropout and short-term stopout behavior in order to test that assumption. We find significant differences between those who stop out and those who drop out in the first year.…
Descriptors: Stopouts, Dropout Rate, Dropout Research, Postsecondary Education
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Di Liberto, Adriana – Economics of Education Review, 2008
In this paper, we study the connection between growth and human capital in a convergence regression for the panel of Italian regions. We include measures of average primary, secondary and tertiary education. We find that increased education seems to contribute to growth only in the South. Decomposing total schooling into its three constituent…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Human Capital, Illiteracy, Foreign Countries
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Siegfried, John J.; Sanderson, Allen R.; McHenry, Peter – Economics of Education Review, 2007
This essay describes methodological approaches and pitfalls common to studies of the economic impact of colleges and universities. Such studies often claim local benefits that imply annualized rates of return on local investment exceeding 100 percent. We address problems in these studies pertaining to the specification of the counterfactual, the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Economic Impact, Economics
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Tuckman, Howard P. – Economics of Education Review, 1988
This paper explores how institutional and technological change affect the quality of the science and engineering labor force. Sources of imbalance between demand and supply are considered, along with the effects of institutional and technological change. A model is introduced to relate changes in market imbalance to both labor force quality and…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Human Capital
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Skalli, Ali – Economics of Education Review, 2007
Most of the studies that account for the endogeneity bias when estimating the returns to schooling assume that the relationship between education and earnings is linear. Studies that assume the latter relationship to be non-linear simply ignore the endogeneity bias. Moreover, they either assume an ad-hoc non-linear relationship or argue that…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Income, Correlation, Causal Models
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