Journal article | Zeitschriftenartikel
Skills, earnings, and employment: exploring causality in the estimation of returns to skills
Ample evidence indicates that a person’s human capital is important for success on the llabor market in terms of both wages and employment prospects. However, unlike the efforts to identify the impact of school attainment on labor-market outcomes, the literature on returns to cognitive skills has not yet provided convincing evidence that the estimated returns can be causally interpreted. Using the PIAAC Survey of Adult Skills, this paper explores several approaches that aim to address potential threats to causal identification of returns to skills, in terms of both higher wages and better employment chances. We address measurement error by exploiting the fact that PIAAC measures skills in several domains. Furthermore, we estimate instrumental-variable models that use skill variation stemming from school attainment and parental education to circumvent reverse causation. Results show a strikingly similar pattern across the diverse set of countries in our sample. In fact, the instrumental-variable estimates are consistently larger than those found in standard least-squares estimations. The same is true in two "natural experiments," one of which exploits variation in skills from changes in compulsory-schooling laws across U.S. states. The other one identifies technologically induced variation in broadband Internet availability that gives rise to variation in ICT skills across German municipalities. Together, the results suggest that least-squares estimates may provide a lower bound of the true returns to skills in the labor market.
- ISSN
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2196-0739
- Extent
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Seite(n): 30
- Language
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Englisch
- Notes
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Status: Veröffentlichungsversion; begutachtet (peer reviewed)
- Bibliographic citation
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Large-scale Assessments in Education, 5
- Subject
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Wirtschaft
Bildung und Erziehung
Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie
Arbeitsmarktforschung
Makroebene des Bildungswesens
Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften
Berufsaussicht
Berufserfolg
Beschäftigungsfähigkeit
Humankapital
Qualifikation
Kompetenz
kognitive Fähigkeit
Bildungsniveau
lebenslanges Lernen
Einkommen
Messung
internationaler Vergleich
Bildungsökonomie
- Event
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Geistige Schöpfung
- (who)
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Hampf, Franziska
Wiederhold, Simon
Woessmann, Ludger
- Event
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Veröffentlichung
- (where)
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Deutschland
- (when)
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2017
- DOI
- Rights
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GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften. Bibliothek Köln
- Last update
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21.06.2024, 4:27 PM CEST
Data provider
GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften. Bibliothek Köln. If you have any questions about the object, please contact the data provider.
Object type
- Zeitschriftenartikel
Associated
- Hampf, Franziska
- Wiederhold, Simon
- Woessmann, Ludger
Time of origin
- 2017