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Tyler, John; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1995
Tyler and others refute Hecker's 1990 article warning that the economy is generating college graduates faster than it is generating jobs. They argue that the 1980s labor market successfully absorbed new college graduates. Hecker expresses concerns over their analysis. (SK)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Educational Economics, Employment Level, Labor Supply
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Altonji, Joseph G. – Journal of Human Resources, 1995
National Longitudinal Survey data were used to estimate the effects of specific high school curricula on wages and educational attainment. Return to additional academic courses was small, suggesting that the value of a year of high school cannot be accounted for by estimates of the value of courses taken. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Education, Course Selection (Students), Educational Attainment, Educational Economics
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Tuijnman, Albert; And Others – Economics of Education Review, 1988
Findings from a Swedish longitudinal study of 834 men indicate that acquired level of youth education functions as a socioeconomic stratifier through its effects on occupational status and earnings at the age of 30, 35, 43, and 52. Adult education appears to reinforce the effects of youth education on occupational status from age 35 to 52.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Economics, Educational Status Comparison, Elementary Secondary Education
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Bowman, Mary Jean – Oxford Review of Education, 1991
Discusses educational equality and inequality from an economist's perspective. Considers human capital theory and interpretation of life cycles in learning and earning. Addresses schooling and experience components of changes in the inequality of earned incomes, educational expansion, and inequalities in schooling. Explores the roles of skill…
Descriptors: Economic Impact, Educational Development, Educational Economics, Educational Opportunities