Citation
Discussion Paper Details
Please find the details for DP6832 in an easy to copy and paste format below:
Full Details | Bibliographic Reference
Full Details
Title: Does Speed Signal Ability? The Impact of Grade Repetitions on Employment and Wages
Author(s): Thomas Brodaty, Robert J. Gary-Bobo and Ana Prieto
Publication Date: May 2008
Keyword(s): grade repetitions, Returns to education, Signalling, time to degree and wages
Programme Area(s): Labour Economics and Public Economics
Abstract: We propose a new test for the presence of job-market signalling in the sense of Spence (1973), based on an equation in which log-wages are explained by two endogenous variables: the student's degree and the student's time to degree, not simply by years of education. Log-wages are regressed on a measure of education, which is a position on a scale of certificates and degrees, and a measure of the student delay, defined as the difference between the individual's school-leaving age and the average school-leaving age of students holding the same certificate or degree. We use past school-opening instruments, and distance-to-the-nearest-college, also measured in the past, when students were entering grade 6, to identify the parameters. We find a robust, significant and negative impact of the delay variable on wages, averaged over the first five years of career. A year of delay causes a 9% decrease of the student's wage. The only reasonable explanation for this effect is the fact that longer delays signal unobserved characteristics with a negative productivity value. We finally estimate a nonlinear model of education choices and cannot reject the assumption that the data is generated by a job-market signalling equilibrium.
For full details and related downloads, please visit: https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=6832
Bibliographic Reference
Brodaty, T, Gary-Bobo, R and Prieto, A. 2008. 'Does Speed Signal Ability? The Impact of Grade Repetitions on Employment and Wages'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=6832