The economic value of education : three statistical approaches

This thesis deals with the topic of the economic value of education from three different substantive and statistical perspectives. In Chapter 2 the effects on educational subject choice of the increase in tuition fees after the 2012 higher education reform in the UK are analysed at individual level....

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Main Author: Requena Casado, Laura
Other Authors: Risa Hole, Arne ; McIntosh, Steven
Published: University of Sheffield 2017
Subjects:
330
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739833
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7398332019-03-05T15:40:39ZThe economic value of education : three statistical approachesRequena Casado, LauraRisa Hole, Arne ; McIntosh, Steven2017This thesis deals with the topic of the economic value of education from three different substantive and statistical perspectives. In Chapter 2 the effects on educational subject choice of the increase in tuition fees after the 2012 higher education reform in the UK are analysed at individual level. A multinomial logit model with a difference-in-differences approach is estimated with data from HESA, choosing Scotland, where the 2012 reform had no effect, as the control group. Several models are presented taking into account students’ socioeconomic background and gender. Main results show that after the reform students are less likely to opt for Arts & Humanities and more likely to choose Health & Life Sciences. Chapter 3 estimates the returns to education in Spain using an instrumental variables approach. With data from the 2011 Living Conditions Survey, a sample selectivity model is estimated in order to avoid possible selection biases derived from only considering wage-earners. Family background variables are used as instruments for schooling. Beside showing that, in agreement with pertinent literature, ordinary least squares coefficients are downward biased, the analysis confirms that more educated individuals have the largest returns, although in Spain educational returns are higher for women than for men. In the context of increasing global migrations, recent research has shown relevant differences in education and skills between natives and immigrants in developed societies. With data from PIAAC, chapter 4 presents extended Mincerian equations to gauge differences regarding returns to skills and levels of education between natives and immigrants arrived to Denmark, France, Spain, and United Kingdom from OECD and non-OECD countries. The ordinary least squares analysis is complemented with a Bayesian estimation. Results suggest that there are significant differences between native and immigrant returns to education in some of the European countries considered.330University of Sheffieldhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739833http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/19610/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 330
spellingShingle 330
Requena Casado, Laura
The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
description This thesis deals with the topic of the economic value of education from three different substantive and statistical perspectives. In Chapter 2 the effects on educational subject choice of the increase in tuition fees after the 2012 higher education reform in the UK are analysed at individual level. A multinomial logit model with a difference-in-differences approach is estimated with data from HESA, choosing Scotland, where the 2012 reform had no effect, as the control group. Several models are presented taking into account students’ socioeconomic background and gender. Main results show that after the reform students are less likely to opt for Arts & Humanities and more likely to choose Health & Life Sciences. Chapter 3 estimates the returns to education in Spain using an instrumental variables approach. With data from the 2011 Living Conditions Survey, a sample selectivity model is estimated in order to avoid possible selection biases derived from only considering wage-earners. Family background variables are used as instruments for schooling. Beside showing that, in agreement with pertinent literature, ordinary least squares coefficients are downward biased, the analysis confirms that more educated individuals have the largest returns, although in Spain educational returns are higher for women than for men. In the context of increasing global migrations, recent research has shown relevant differences in education and skills between natives and immigrants in developed societies. With data from PIAAC, chapter 4 presents extended Mincerian equations to gauge differences regarding returns to skills and levels of education between natives and immigrants arrived to Denmark, France, Spain, and United Kingdom from OECD and non-OECD countries. The ordinary least squares analysis is complemented with a Bayesian estimation. Results suggest that there are significant differences between native and immigrant returns to education in some of the European countries considered.
author2 Risa Hole, Arne ; McIntosh, Steven
author_facet Risa Hole, Arne ; McIntosh, Steven
Requena Casado, Laura
author Requena Casado, Laura
author_sort Requena Casado, Laura
title The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
title_short The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
title_full The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
title_fullStr The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
title_full_unstemmed The economic value of education : three statistical approaches
title_sort economic value of education : three statistical approaches
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739833
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