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Johnson, Matthew T. – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This paper adds to the understanding of student decisions about graduate school attendance by studying the magnitude of the effect of business cycle fluctuations on enrollment. I use data on graduate school enrollment from the Current Population Survey and statewide variation in unemployment rates across time to proxy for changes in business cycle…
Descriptors: Attendance, Enrollment, Economic Climate, Labor Market
Carroll, David; Tani, Massimiliano – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This study investigates the incidence of over-education amongst recent Australian bachelor degree graduates and its effect on their earnings. We find that between 24% and 37% of graduates were over-educated shortly after course completion, with over-education most common amongst young females and least common amongst older females. Over-education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, College Graduates, Salary Wage Differentials
McHenry, Peter – Economics of Education Review, 2011
In this paper, I estimate the effect of state school inputs on labor market returns to schooling. The method follows Card and Krueger (1992) and Heckman et al. (1996), but I extend their analysis in two ways. First, I correct state-level returns to schooling for selective migration, adapting a method from Dahl (2002). Second, I use more recent…
Descriptors: State Schools, Labor Market, Migration, Census Figures
Jaramillo, Miguel – Economics of Education Review, 2012
An unequal distribution of teacher quality is a problem underlying the unequal distribution of educational outcomes in developing countries. However, we know little about how the labor market produces such a distribution. Using data from two regions in Peru, we investigate whether there is a national teacher market or smaller regional markets. We…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Labor Market, Teacher Distribution
Mavromaras, Kostas; McGuinness, Seamus – Economics of Education Review, 2012
This paper uses panel data and econometric methods to estimate the incidence and the dynamic properties of overskilling among employed individuals. The paper begins by asking whether there is extensive overskilling in the labour market, and whether overskilling differs by education pathway. The answer to both questions is yes. The paper continues…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Vocational Education, College Graduates, Labor Market
Yamauchi, Futoshi; Tiongco, Marites – Economics of Education Review, 2013
This paper shows mutually consistent evidence to support female advantage in education and disadvantage in labor markets observed in the Philippines. We set up a model that shows multiple Nash equilibria to explain schooling and labor market behaviors for females and males. Our evidence from unique sibling data of schooling and work history and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Patterns, Income, Human Capital
Maestri, Virginia – Economics of Education Review, 2013
In reaction to the OECD-wide declining trend in scientific enrollments, the Italian government launched a policy in 2005 to promote the study of science at the university. The policy promoted extra-curricular activities for secondary school students in Chemistry, Physics, Math and Materials Science. This article evaluates the policy impact on…
Descriptors: Physics, Program Effectiveness, Chemistry, Secondary School Students
Gao, Wenshu; Smyth, Russell – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This article uses data from the China Urban Labour Survey administered across 12 cities in 2005 to estimate the economic returns to speaking standard Mandarin among internal migrants in China's urban labour market. The article builds on studies that estimate the economic returns to international immigrants of being fluent in the major language of…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Language Fluency, Migrants, Labor Market
Dobkin, Carlos; Ferreira, Fernando – Economics of Education Review, 2010
Age based school entry laws force parents and educators to consider an important tradeoff: though students who are the youngest in their school cohort typically have poorer academic performance, on average, they have slightly higher educational attainment. In this paper we document that for a large cohort of California and Texas natives the school…
Descriptors: School Law, School Entrance Age, Educational Attainment, Labor Market
Butler, Daniel M.; Butler, Richard J. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
The late 1990s saw the introduction and spread of the Internet and email. For social scientists, these technologies lowered communication costs and made inter-department collaboration much easier. Using women in political science as a case study, we show that this change has disproportionately affected women in two ways. First, women have…
Descriptors: Political Science, Females, Labor Market, Journal Articles
Goldhaber, Dan; Destler, Katharine; Player, Daniel – Economics of Education Review, 2010
Some scholars and policymakers who are concerned about the inequitable distribution of quality teachers suggest offering financial incentives for working in hard-to-staff schools. Previous studies have estimated compensating differentials using hedonic modeling, an approach potentially undermined by district-wide salary schedules and the lack of…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Teaching Conditions, Incentives, Labor Market
Tsai, Yuping – Economics of Education Review, 2010
Studies examining the wage effect of overeducation have generated very consistent results. Their findings suggest that, for workers with similar educational attainment, workers who are overeducated for the job suffer from significant wage penalties. However, most studies use cross-sectional data, implicitly assuming that workers are randomly…
Descriptors: Wages, Individual Characteristics, Educational Attainment, Labor Market
Ordine, Patrizia; Rose, Giuseppe – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This paper proposes a theoretical framework where "within graduates" wage inequality is related to overeducation/educational mismatch in the labor market. We show that wage inequality may arise because of inefficient self-selection into education in the presence of ability-complementary technological progress and asymmetric information…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economics, Economic Factors, Wages
Chevalier, Arnaud – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Using a survey of a cohort of UK graduates, linked to administrative data on higher education participation, this paper investigates the labour market attainment of recent graduates by subject of study. We document a large heterogeneity in the mean wages of graduates from different subjects and a considerably larger one within subject with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Intellectual Disciplines, Graduate Surveys
Kelly, Elish; O'Connell, Philip J.; Smyth, Emer – Economics of Education Review, 2010
This paper looks at the economic returns to different fields of study in Ireland in 2004 and also the value placed on various job-related competencies, accumulated on completion of higher education, in the Irish labour market. In examining these issues, the paper also analyses, through quantile regression, how the returns vary across the earnings…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Education Work Relationship, Outcomes of Education, College Graduates