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Hartog, Joop; Ding, Xiaohao; Liao, Juan – Education Economics, 2014
We use the method of Dominitz and Manski [1996. Eliciting student expectations of the return to schooling. "Journal of Human Resources" 31, no. 1: 1-26] to solicit anticipated wage distributions for continuing to a master degree or going to work after completing the bachelor degree. The means of the distributions have an effect on…
Descriptors: Wages, Expectation, Student Costs, Academic Persistence
Schweri, Juerg; Hartog, Joop; Wolter, Stefan C. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
We use a unique data set about the wage distribution that Swiss students expect for themselves ex ante, deriving parametric and non-parametric measures to capture expected wage risk. These wage risk measures are unfettered by heterogeneity which handicapped the use of actual market wage dispersion as risk measure in earlier studies. Students in…
Descriptors: Students, Expectation, Wages, Risk
Hartog, Joop; Sun, Yuze; Ding, Xiaohao – Economics of Education Review, 2010
We report evidence that university reputation affects wages of bachelors in China. An unconditional difference between a top-100 university and a top 400-500 university of 23% is increased to some 28% by adding controls. Within the top-100 there is no differentiation in pay-off. Self-rated quality of high school, while affecting quality of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Market, Reputation, Institutional Characteristics

Hartog, Joop – Economics of Education Review, 2000
Drawing on empirical studies from five countries (Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, United Kingdom, and United States), over 2 decades, outlines irregularities in the incidence of over- and under-education and consequences for individual earnings. The overall incidence of overeducation in the labor market is about 26 percent. (Contains 33 references.)…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment, Elementary Secondary Education