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Above and Beyond the Call: Long-Term Real Earnings Effects of British Male Military Conscription in the Post-War Years

TLDR
In this paper, a regression discontinuity design was used to compare the earnings of age cohorts containing British men who were required to undertake post-war National Service with later cohorts who were exempt.
Abstract
This paper adds to the literature on the relationship between military service and long-term real earnings. Based on a regression discontinuity design it compares the earnings of age cohorts containing British men who were required to undertake post-war National Service with later cohorts who were exempt. It also compares age cohorts containing men who were conscripted into military service during the first half of WWII and those with later spells of conscription. It argues that, in general, we should not expect large long-term real earnings differences between conscript and non-conscript cohorts since important elements of the former received military training and experience of direct value in the civilian jobs market. In the case of call-up during WWII there is even more reason to expect that there was no major disadvantages to those conscripted. This occurred largely because their pre-military job status was preserved due to the employment of substitute women workers who acted as a temporary employment buffer thereby protecting serving men's positions on the jobs hierarchy.

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Do Guns Displace Books? The Impact of Compulsory Military Service on Educational Attainment

TL;DR: In this paper, the causal effect of conscription on the probability of obtaining a university degree was investigated in Germany, using a regression-discontinuity design that employs special regulations associated with conscription in Germany in 1956.
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Compulsory Military Service and Future Earnings: Evidence from a Quasi-Experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, the long-term effects of military service on the earnings of Druze men were analyzed using data from the Israeli census and they found an economically and statistically significant positive effect of 18% on their wages.
References
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The causal effect of education on earnings

TL;DR: This paper surveys the recent literature on the causal relationship between education and earnings and concludes that the average (or average marginal) return to education is not much below the estimate that emerges from a standard human capital earnings function fit by OLS.
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Life-Cycle Variation in the Association between Current and Lifetime Earnings

TL;DR: The authors found that the relationship between current and lifetime earnings departs substantially from the textbook errors-in-variables model in ways that vary systematically over the life cycle, which can enable more appropriate analysis of and correction for errors in variance bias in a wide range of research that uses current earnings to proxy for lifetime earnings.
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The Womanpower Problem in Britain during the Second World War

TL;DR: At the national women's conference convened by the government in September 1943 Winston Churchill assured the women delegates that the contribution to the war effort by British women had ‘definitely altered those social and sex balances which years of convention had established'.
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