Type | Working Paper |
Title | The effects of school quality on the youth labor market |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2000 |
URL | http://www.chicagobooth.edu/assests/stigler/162.pdf |
Abstract | How does the quality of education received by children affect their performance when they enter the labor market? This paper is an attempt to answer this question for new entrants to the labor market over a period from 1970 to the mid 1990s. In so doing we try to pull together some strands in the literature on both education and the labor market. We also hope to shed light on some of the policy concerns lurking in the background of the relevant literature. Most previous studies of the effect of school quality on the labor market, beginning with Card and Krueger (1992), measure quality with inputs (school expenditures, teacher-pupil ratios). We focus instead on an output measure - test scores. Thus our work is also related to the literature on 'education production functions,' which tries to estimate a link between education inputs and outputs. Both the school inputs-labor market and the education production literatures are unsettled.2 But they also stand in uncomfortable juxtaposition. According to Eric Hanushek (1996) the central tendency of hundreds of education production function studies is that there is no reliable connection between school inputs and outputs. According to Card and Krueger (1996) there is usually a positive relation between school inputs and earnings. While one or both of these results may be wrong, 3they raise an obvious question: |
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