Alternative Estimates of the Effect of Schooling on Earnings
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by MIT Press in The Review of Economics and Statistics
- Vol. 82 (1), 103-116
- https://doi.org/10.1162/003465300558542
Abstract
This paper examines how assumptions imposed on the data influence estimates of schooling's effect on earnings. The paper models schooling decisions as treatment effects and imposes assumptions about schooling selection to estimate bounds on the treatment effect. The study begins by using the worst-case bounds derived by Manski (1989, 1990, 1994, 1995) and adds assumptions from the Roy model of schooling self-selection to narrow the bounds on the schooling treatment effect. The bounds are narrowed further by using family structure, college proximity, and school-quality characteristics as exclusion restrictions. The selection problem requires the researcher to make explicit assumptions to estimate the effect of schooling on earnings. This paper demonstrates that different selection assumptions yield very different results.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two-Stage Least Squares Estimation of Average Causal Effects in Models with Variable Treatment IntensityJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1995
- Identification and Estimation of Local Average Treatment EffectsEconometrica, 1994
- Does School Quality Matter? Returns to Education and the Characteristics of Public Schools in the United StatesJournal of Political Economy, 1992
- The Empirical Content of the Roy ModelEconometrica, 1990
- Anatomy of the Selection ProblemThe Journal of Human Resources, 1989
- Education and Self-SelectionJournal of Political Economy, 1979
- Bayesian Inference for Causal Effects: The Role of RandomizationThe Annals of Statistics, 1978
- Estimating the Returns to Schooling: Some Econometric ProblemsEconometrica, 1977