scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Educational policies in a long-run perspective

Michela Braga, +2 more
- 01 Jan 2013 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 73, pp 45-100
TLDR
Braga et al. as discussed by the authors studied the effects of educational reforms on school attainment and found support for the idea that left-wing parties support reforms that are inclusive, while rightwing parties prefer selective ones, by characterizing each group of reforms for their impact on mean years of education, educational inequality and intergenerational persistence.
Abstract
In this paper we study the effects of educational reforms on school attainment. We construct a dataset of relevant reforms that occurred at the national level over the last century, and match individual information from 24 European countries to the most likely set-up faced when individual educational choices were undertaken. Our identification strategy relies on temporal and geographical variations in the institutional arrangements, controlling for time/country fixed effects, as well as for country specific time trend. By characterizing each group of reforms for their impact on mean years of education, educational inequality and intergenerational persistence, we show an ideal policy menu which has been available to policymakers. We distinguish between groups of policies that are either ‘inclusive’ or ‘selective’, depending on their diminishing or augmenting impact on inequality and persistence. Finally, we correlate these reform measures to political coalitions prevailing in parliament, finding support for the idea that left-wing parties support reforms that are inclusive, while right-wing parties prefer selective ones. — Michela Braga, Daniele Checchi and Elena Meschi

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Priceless: The Nonpecuniary Benefits of Schooling

TL;DR: The American Economic Association (AEA) publications are available for personal or classroom use without fee provided that copies are not distributed for profit or direct commercial advantage and that copies show this notice on the first page or initial screen of a display along with the full citation, including the name of the author as mentioned in this paper.
Journal Article

When Schools Compete: A Cautionary Tale

TL;DR: Fiske and Ladd as discussed by the authors provided a detailed data-based analysis of New Zealand's nationwide change from a state run education system to locally run schools using market principles in the delivery of public education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wish you were here? Quasi-experimental evidence on the effect of education on self-reported attitude toward immigrants☆

TL;DR: This paper used European Social Survey and Labour Force Survey data from 2002 to 2012 to estimate the causal effect of years of education on European natives opinion toward immigration, by exploiting the exogenous discontinuity generated by reforms in compulsory education in Europe in the 1940s through the 1990s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education, mental health, and education-labor market misfit.

TL;DR: The results show that educational attainment produces mental health benefits in most European countries, however, in some of the countries, these benefits are limited or even completely eliminated by education-labor market misfit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rising Educational Participation and the Trend to Later Childbearing.

TL;DR: A decline in the first birth rates of childless women at younger ages is followed by a rise in parity-specific rates at older ages, resulting in a general shift up the age scale in the timetable of parenthood.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

How Much Should We Trust Differences-In-Differences Estimates?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors randomly generate placebo laws in state-level data on female wages from the Current Population Survey and use OLS to compute the DD estimate of its "effect" as well as the standard error of this estimate.
Posted Content

Teachers, Schools, and Academic Achievement

TL;DR: The authors disentangles the separate factors influencing achievement with special attention given to the role of teacher differences and other aspects of schools, and estimates educational production functions based on models of achievement growth with individual fixed effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teachers, Schools, and Academic Achievement

TL;DR: In this article, the authors disentangle the impact of schools and teachers in influencing achievement with special attention given to the potential problems of omitted or mismeasured variables and of student and school selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Illustration of a Pitfall in Estimating the Effects of Aggregate Variables on Micro Units

TL;DR: The authors illustrates the danger of spurious regression from this kind of misspecification, using as an example a wage regression estimated on data for individual workers that includes in the specification aggregate regressors for characteristics of geographical states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does Compulsory School Attendance Affect Schooling and Earnings

TL;DR: This paper found that the season of birth is related to educational attainment and earnings, and that roughly 25 percent of potential dropouts remain in school because of compulsory schooling laws. But, they did not study the effect of compulsory attendance laws on educational attainment.
Related Papers (5)