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Lucas, Robert E. B. – American Economic Review, 1977
Single copies may be purchased from Secretary, C. Elton Hinshaw, 1313 21st Avenue South, Nashville, Tennessee 37212. (JG)
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Graphs, Individual Characteristics, Investment
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Ishikawa, Mamoru; Ryan, Daniel – Economics of Education Review, 2002
Uses data from the National Adult Literacy Survey to examine the relationship between schooling and earnings. Basic skills are partitioned between those acquired through schooling and those acquired elsewhere. Finds that, for the most part, it is the substance of learning in school--the accumulated human capital--that counts, not the credential.…
Descriptors: Credentials, Educational Economics, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Capital
Mincer, Jacob – 1989
Using information on time costs of training and gains in wages attributable to training, rates of return on training investments were compared. The range of estimates based on several data sets generally exceeds the magnitude of rates of return usually observed for schooling investments. It is not clear, however, that the difference represents…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Economics, Human Capital, Investment
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Bauer, Thomas K. – Economics of Education Review, 2002
Using a large German Socioeconomic Panel data set for the period 1984-98, investigates the wage effects of two different measures of educational mismatch, overeducation and undereducation, when controlling for unobserved heterogeneity. Finds that wages differences between overeducated and undereducated workers totally disappear in most cases.…
Descriptors: Educational Economics, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Human Capital
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Easterly, William – Education Next, 2002
States that despite spending massive amounts of money to expand their educational systems, poor countries have witnessed a 4-decade decline in their medium economic growth rates from 3 percent in the 1960s to zero percent in the 1990s. Offers several reasons for the decline, such as variations in the quality of education and low labor…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Economic Development, Educational Economics, Educational Quality
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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
Patterson, David; Horowitz, Bruce – 1978
The issue of subminimum wages for full-time students who are working part-time is discussed in this publication of the National Student Association. It is suggested that large corporations and institutions of higher education are benefiting from these low wages, while students trying to finance their education during a time of growing inflation…
Descriptors: College Students, Directories, Educational Economics, Federal Regulation
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Priest, Bill J. – Community and Junior College Journal, 1975
This memo proposes a 5 percent increase in productivity in the Dallas Community College District and invites all district personnel to participate by thinking of ways of achieving this goal without lowering standards of educational quality and without reducing salaries and wages. (DC)
Descriptors: Accountability, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Economics, Educational Quality
Association of Physical Plant Administrators, Corvallis, OR. – 1971
This report compiles unit cost and wage rate information for fiscal year 1969-70 on maintenance and operation of physical plants of universities and colleges. Data are divided into unit costs per gross feet and wage rate survey. Each section is grouped by region, enrollment, and by top level of academic program. The appendix includes questionnaire…
Descriptors: Colleges, Cost Effectiveness, Costs, Educational Economics
Schultz, T. Paul – 2001
Women and men often receive the same percentage increase in their wage rates with advances in schooling. Because these returns decline with more schooling, the marginal returns for women will tend to exceed those for men, especially in countries where women are much less educated. The health and schooling of children are more closely related to…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Educational Economics, Educational Research, Gender Issues
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Marcus, Richard D. – Journal of Educational Statistics, 1984
This paper extends Minar's (1974) semilog wage regression method to include those who interrupted their schooling with years of work. Schooling and the duration of the interruption interact to create nonlinearities in the rate of return to schooling. The method is applied to Vietnam era G.I. students and civilian interrupters. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Educational Economics, Estimation (Mathematics)
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Dougherty, Christopher R. S.; Jimenez, Emmanuel – Economics of Education Review, 1991
Earnings functions have been widely used to estimate the returns to education and training. Many studies have relied on the Mincerian specification for the earnings function, which embodies several assumptions. A study of Brazilian workers' wages finds that the Mincerian specification yields upwardly biased estimates of the returns to education,…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Education Work Relationship, Educational Economics, Educational Policy
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Cohn, Elchanan; Rhine, Sherrie L. W. – Higher Education, 1989
The difference between male students' actual and potential earnings are analyzed based on data from the 1970 wave of the National Longitudinal Study (NLS) Youths Labor Market Experience and the 1979 NLS Youths cohort. Estimates are provided by full- and part-time enrollments and level, and results compared to other estimates. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Economics, Employment Potential, Full Time Students
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Creech, Sandra K.; And Others – Review of Higher Education, 1994
The economic impact of Texas higher education is examined in three areas: income (gross state product), payroll, and employment. Two alternative models are compared the net difference used to show the quantitative benefits of appropriations to selected public institutions rather than reduced tax rates. Impact is found to be positive, even without…
Descriptors: College Outcomes Assessment, Economic Impact, Educational Economics, Employment Patterns
Rubi, David C. – 1995
According to U.S. Census statistics, for every step up in educational attainment, there is an increase in average income. The mean income for those with an associate's degree, $21,116 per year, is five percent more than a person with some college, and 40% more ($6,050), than a person with only a high school diploma or equivalent. The basic cost of…
Descriptors: College Role, Community Colleges, Cost Effectiveness, Economic Impact
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