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Sang Yoon Lee; Nicolas A. Roys; Ananth Seshadri – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
We present a model of endogenous schooling and earnings to isolate the causal effect of parents' education on children's education and earnings outcomes. The model suggests that parents' education is positively related to children's earnings, but its relationship with children's education is ambiguous. Identification is achieved by comparing the…
Descriptors: Parent Background, Educational Attainment, Correlation, Income
Francis M. Dillon; Edward L. Glaeser; William R. Kerr – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
We measure the level and growth of education segregation in American workplaces from 2000 to 2020. American workplaces show an educational segregation, measured by the degree to which the establishment has mostly workers of similar education levels, that is comparable to racial residential segregation in a typical metro area. Workplace isolation…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Professional Isolation, Age Differences, Gender Differences
Joshua Angrist; Peter Hull; Russell Legate-Yang; Parag A. Pathak; Christopher R. Walters – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
School districts increasingly gauge school quality with surveys that ask about school climate and student engagement. We use data from New York City's middle and high schools to compare the long-run predictive validity of surveys with that of conventional test score value-added models (VAMs). Our analysis leverages the New York school match, which…
Descriptors: School Surveys, Middle Schools, High Schools, Prediction
Diego A. Briones; Sarah Turner – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
Beginning in March 2020 and ultimately continuing to September 2023, most student loan borrowers had their required payments on federal student loans paused. For student loan borrowers with limited access to credit, the payment pause provided additional cash-on-hand that may have allowed them to reduce their work hours. Using survey data capturing…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Loan Repayment, Federal Aid, Working Hours
Kalil, Ariel; Mayer, Susan; Delgado, William; Gennetian, Lisa A. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
College-educated mothers spend substantially more time in intensive childcare than less educated mothers despite their higher opportunity cost of time and working more hours. Using data from the 2010-2013 and 2021 waves of the Well-being Module of the American Time Use Survey, we investigate this puzzle by testing the hypothesis that…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Parent Background, Mothers, Child Care
Barr, Andrew; Kawano, Laura; Sacerdote, Bruce; Skimmyhorn, William; Stevens, Michael – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021
The Post 9/11 GI Bill (PGIB) is among the largest and most generous college subsidies enacted thus far in the U.S. We examine the impact of the PGIB on veterans' college-going, degree completion, federal education tax benefit utilization, and long run earnings. Among veterans potentially induced to enroll, the introduction of the PGIB raised…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Veterans, Higher Education, Income
Lleras-Muney, Adriana – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
Education and income are strong predictors of health and longevity. In the last 20 years many efforts have been made to understand if these relationships are causal and what the possible role of policy should be as a result. The evidence from various studies is ambiguous: the effects of education and income policies on health are heterogeneous and…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Income, Predictor Variables, Health
Jack Mountjoy – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
This paper studies the causal impacts of public universities on the outcomes of their marginally admitted students. I use administrative admission records spanning all 35 public universities in Texas, which collectively enroll 10 percent of American public university students, to systematically identify and employ decentralized cutoffs in SAT/ACT…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, College Students, Outcomes of Education, Admission Criteria
Cohodes, Sarah; Eren, Ozkan; Ozturk, Orgul – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
This paper examines the effects of a comprehensive performance pay program for teachers implemented in high-need schools on students' longer-run educational, criminal justice, and economic self-sufficiency outcomes. Using linked administrative data from a Southern state, we leverage the quasi-randomness of the timing of program adoption across…
Descriptors: Merit Pay, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Salaries, Outcomes of Education
Leive, Adam; Ruhm, Christopher J. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020
We examine whether the least educated population groups experienced the worst mortality trends during the 21st century by measuring changes in mortality across education quartiles. We document sharply differing gender patterns. Among women, mortality trends improved fairly monotonically with education. Conversely, male trends for the lowest three…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Mortality Rate, Gender Differences, Disproportionate Representation
Esther Duflo; Pascaline Dupas; Elizabeth Spelke; Mark P. Walsh – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
We provide experimental evidence on the intergenerational impacts of secondary education subsidies in a low-income context, leveraging a randomized controlled trial and 15-year longitudinal follow-up. For young women, receiving a scholarship for secondary school delays childbearing and marriage, and reduces unwanted pregnancies. Female scholarship…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Scholarships, Program Effectiveness
Masuda, Kazuya; Shigeoka, Hitoshi – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
We examine the mortality effects of a 1947 school reform in Japan, which extended compulsory schooling from primary to secondary school by as much as 3 years. The abolition of secondary school fees also indicates that those affected by the reform likely came from disadvantaged families who could have benefited the most from schooling. Even in this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Death, Compulsory Education, Secondary Education
Jardina, Ashley; Blair, Peter Q.; Heck, Justin; Debroy, Papia – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
Past work has documented significant occupational segregation between Black and white workers in the U.S. labor force. Little work, however, has examined racial occupational segregation in recent years or by levels of education and then at the intersection of education and race. In this paper, we contribute to this literature by calculating a…
Descriptors: African Americans, Whites, Racial Segregation, Employees
Cawley, John; Han, Euna; Kim, Jiyoon; Norton, Edward C. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2020
The educational attainment of siblings is highly correlated. We test for a specific type of peer effect between siblings in educational attainment: genetic nurture. Specifically, we test whether a person's educational attainment is correlated with their sibling's polygenic score (PGS) for educational attainment, controlling for their own PGS for…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Siblings, Correlation, Genetics
Jeffrey T. Denning; Lesley J. Turner – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
This paper documents several facts about graduate program graduation rates using administrative data covering public and nonprofit graduate students in Texas. Despite conventional wisdom that most graduate students complete their programs, only 58 percent of who started their program in 2004 graduated within 6 years. Between the 2004 and 2013…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Graduation Rate, Trend Analysis, Salaries
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