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The causal effect of education on earnings

David Card
- 01 Jan 1999 - 
- pp 1801-1863
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TLDR
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.
Abstract
This paper surveys the recent literature on the causal relationship between education and earnings. I focus on four areas of work: theoretical and econometric advances in modelling the causal effect of education in the presence of heterogeneous returns to schooling; recent studies that use institutional aspects of the education system to form instrumental variables estimates of the return to schooling; recent studies of the earnings and schooling of twins; and recent attempts to explicitly model sources of heterogeneity in the returns to education. Consistent with earlier surveys of the literature, I conclude 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. Evidence from the latest studies of identical twins suggests a small upward "ability" bias -- on the order of 10%. A consistent finding among studies using instrumental variables based on institutional changes in the education system is that the estimated returns to schooling are 20-40% above the corresponding OLS estimates. Part of the explanation for this finding may be that marginal returns to schooling for certain subgroups -- particularly relatively disadvantaged groups with low education outcomes -- are higher than the average marginal returns to education in the population as a whole.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the Return to Schooling: Progress on Some Persistent Econometric Problems

TL;DR: In this paper, a set of recent studies have attempted to measure the causal effect of education on labor market earnings by using institutional features of the education system as exogenous determinants of schooling outcomes.
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The Role of Cognitive Skills in Economic Development

TL;DR: The role of cognitive skills in pro- moting economic well-being, with a particular focus on the role of school quality and quantity, has been reviewed in this paper, concluding that there is strong evidence that the cognitive skills of the population are powerfully related to indi- vidual earnings, to the distribution of income, and to economic growth.
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The Effect of Education on Crime: Evidence From Prison Inmates, Arrests, and Self-Reports

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of high school graduation on participation in criminal activity accounting for endogeneity of schooling and found that completing high school reduces the probability of incarceration by about.76% for whites and 3.4% for blacks.
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The Determinants of Earnings: A Behavioral Approach

TL;DR: The authors found that the advantages of the children of successful parents go beyond the benefits of superior education, the inheritance of wealth, or the genetic inheritance of cognitive ability, and suggested that noncognitive personality variables such as attitudes towards risk, ability to adapt to new economic conditions, hard work, and the rate of time preference affect both earning and the transmission of economic status across generations.
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Instruments, randomization, and learning about development

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