Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood

The formation of human capital is the main issue in this dissertation. More specifically, this dissertation discusses two alternative types of transferring human capital, in contrast to the transfer of human capital from parents to their children's education. These two types of transfer are s...

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Main Author: Chen, Huei-Ling III
Other Authors: Economics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30520
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-41998-104651/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-305202020-09-29T05:31:18Z Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood Chen, Huei-Ling III Economics Salehi-Isfahani, Djavad Michalopoulos, Charles Rosenthal, Stuart Hazarika, Gautam Murphy, Russell D. sibling effect household model human capital neighborhood effect rate of return The formation of human capital is the main issue in this dissertation. More specifically, this dissertation discusses two alternative types of transferring human capital, in contrast to the transfer of human capital from parents to their children's education. These two types of transfer are sibling effect and neighborhood effect on children's education. Chapter 1 discusses the sibling effect on children's education, "Household Models and Formations of Human Capital with Sibling Effect in Iran." The neighborhood effect on children's education will be discussed in Chapter 2, "Intergenerational Transfer of Human Capital from Parents to Children: Does Neighborhood Matter?" Chapter 3 measures and describes the rate of return on human capital in Taiwan, "Rate of Return on Education by Using Sibling Data from Taiwan." My empirical results show the following findings. First, the presence of older sisters increases younger sisters' and brothers' education. After controlling the resource contribution factor, the empirical result suggests that a role model effect exists between daughters -- the education of older sisters benefits younger sisters in Iran. Second, assuming that the unobserved parent's preference on children's education is not correlated to the unobserved parent's preference on neighborhood, our results suggest that choosing a "good" neighborhood is important for children's education in Iran. Third, the results suggest that in 1990 data from Taiwan, upward bias in the rate of return on schooling due to the omission of family background factors is significant. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:21:58Z 2014-03-14T20:21:58Z 1998-05-01 1998-05-01 1999-05-20 1998-05-20 Dissertation etd-41998-104651 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30520 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-41998-104651/ ETD.PDF In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic sibling effect
household model
human capital
neighborhood effect
rate of return
spellingShingle sibling effect
household model
human capital
neighborhood effect
rate of return
Chen, Huei-Ling III
Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
description The formation of human capital is the main issue in this dissertation. More specifically, this dissertation discusses two alternative types of transferring human capital, in contrast to the transfer of human capital from parents to their children's education. These two types of transfer are sibling effect and neighborhood effect on children's education. Chapter 1 discusses the sibling effect on children's education, "Household Models and Formations of Human Capital with Sibling Effect in Iran." The neighborhood effect on children's education will be discussed in Chapter 2, "Intergenerational Transfer of Human Capital from Parents to Children: Does Neighborhood Matter?" Chapter 3 measures and describes the rate of return on human capital in Taiwan, "Rate of Return on Education by Using Sibling Data from Taiwan." My empirical results show the following findings. First, the presence of older sisters increases younger sisters' and brothers' education. After controlling the resource contribution factor, the empirical result suggests that a role model effect exists between daughters -- the education of older sisters benefits younger sisters in Iran. Second, assuming that the unobserved parent's preference on children's education is not correlated to the unobserved parent's preference on neighborhood, our results suggest that choosing a "good" neighborhood is important for children's education in Iran. Third, the results suggest that in 1990 data from Taiwan, upward bias in the rate of return on schooling due to the omission of family background factors is significant. === Ph. D.
author2 Economics
author_facet Economics
Chen, Huei-Ling III
author Chen, Huei-Ling III
author_sort Chen, Huei-Ling III
title Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
title_short Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
title_full Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
title_fullStr Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
title_full_unstemmed Empirical Studies of Human Capital Formation: The Role of Family, Sibling, and Neighborhood
title_sort empirical studies of human capital formation: the role of family, sibling, and neighborhood
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30520
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-41998-104651/
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