The Socioeconomic Return to Primary Schooling in Victorian England Jason Long Department of Economics Colby College and University of Oxford March 2006.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Economic Consequences of the Transition into Parenthood Wendy Sigle-Rushton Paper presented at the GeNet Seminar: Low Fertility in Industrialised Countries.
Advertisements

Population and Poverty
Social Mobility Within and Across Generations in Britain Since 1851 Jason Long Department of Economics Colby College November 2008.
Immigration in Latin America Revisited Blanca Sánchez-Alonso Universidad San Pablo-CEU Madrid Valencia FRESH Meeting 2013.
A comparison of the characteristics of childless women and mothers in the ONS Longitudinal Study Simon Whitworth Martina Portanti Office for National Statistics.
State of the Planet: Human Population: The Next Half Century Chun-yip Yeung - Summary Tony Chen - Critique EE 563—Graduate Seminar Reference: SCIENCE,
Identifying Non-Cooperative Behavior Among Spouses: Child Outcomes in Migrant-Sending Households Session 4E: Growth, Jobs and Earnings May 15, 2008 Joyce.
Chapter 9 The Gender Gap in Earnings: Explanations Part I Human Capital Theory  definition  investment Differences in Human Capital  education  experience.
Income distribution, labour market returns and school quality REDI3x3 Income Distribution Workshop 4 November 2014 Rulof Burger.
The impact of job loss on family dissolution Silvia Mendolia, Denise Doiron School of Economics, University of New South Wales Introduction Objectives.
1 James P. Smith Childhood Health and the Effects on Adult SES Outcomes.
Job Accessibility and Racial Differences in Youth Employment Rates Keith R. Ihlanfeldt, David L. Sjoquist The American Economic Review Volume 80, Issue.
“‘ Everything in Common... But the Language’? Mobility in Britain and the U.S. Since 1850” Joseph P. Ferrie Department of Economics and Institute for Policy.
0/14 Gender, Ethnic Identity and Work Amelie Constant IZA Bonn, Georgetown University, and DIW Berlin Liliya Gataullina IZA Bonn Klaus F. Zimmermann Bonn.
Chapter 6 Population Growth and Economic Development: Causes, Consequences, and Controversies.
J.CuiDevelopment Workshop1 Why Governments Should Invest More to Educate Girls Jinjie Cui (Eric) Faculty of Economic Science University of Warsaw 12th.
“‘ Everything in Common... But the Language’? Mobility in Britain and the U.S. Since 1850” Joseph P. Ferrie Department of Economics and Institute for Policy.
Chapter 7: Causes of Earnings Differences Year 2002: –FT employed females earned 77.5% of FT employed males. –Female wage growth more than twice inflation;
“‘ Everything in Common... But the Language’? Mobility in Britain and the U.S. Since 1850” Joseph P. Ferrie Department of Economics and Institute for Policy.
Econ 5338 Working Paper by Jessica Foumena
1 The Effect of Benefits on Single Motherhood in Europe Libertad González Universitat Pompeu Fabra May 2006.
Social Mobility Within and Across Generations in Britain Since 1851 Jason Long Department of Economics Colby College September 2007.
CHAPTER 10. WORKER MOBILITY: MIGRATION, IMMIGRATION, AND TURNOVER Examine three dimensions of worker mobility Migration (movement of natives within country)
Poverty: Facts, Causes and Consequences Hilary Hoynes University of California, Davis California Symposium on Poverty October 2009.
Immigrant Legalization: Assessing the Labor Market Effects Magnus Lofstrom Laura Hill, Joseph Hayes.
Gender Inequity and Poverty: why gender?. Amsterdam, The Netherlands International consensus on development Reduce and eliminate poverty Stop.
Returns to Education The Gender Perspective Global Symposium: Education: A Critical Path to Gender Equality and Empowerment, October 2-3, 2007 World Bank,
Home Production Defined Home production - purposeful activities performed in individual households that result in goods and services that enable a family.
How Did Teacher Recruitment and Teacher Career Paths Change as School Provision became Centralized? The Case of Victorian and Edwardian England, —some.
Investments in Human Capital: Education and Training
Economic Mobility and Migration Economics 2333 Class 11 Spring 2014 Robert A. Margo.
Changing Families and Relationships in the US. Lecture 2 Family Sociology.
EMPLOYMENT QUALITY INDICATORS. NATIONAL DEFINITIONS AND DATA SOURCES MAY CHANGE A LOT. CENTRAL STATISTICAL OFFICE POLAND Radoslaw Antczak | Geneve,
Haripriya Gundimeda Associate Professor Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology Bombay Human capital estimates for.
Craig Holmes ESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance, University of Oxford Polarisation, mobility and segmentation in the labour.
The Changing Economic Advantage from Private School* Francis Green *Talk based on: Green, F., S. Machin, R. Murphy and Y. Zhu (2010). The Changing Economic.
Chapter 10: Worker Mobility. Worker mobility movement from one job to another. this may involve geographical changes, and/or movement from one employer.
Education & Development – the human capital approach Since long accepted Schooling has a productive value But if compared with other investments? But how.
Intergenerational Poverty and Mobility. Intergenerational Mobility Leblanc’s Random Family How does this excerpt relate to what we have been talking about?
Incidence and Returns to Apprenticeship Training in Canada: The Role of Family Background and Immigrant Status Ted McDonald Department of Economics University.
Returns to Apprenticeship Training in Austria: Evidence from Failed Firms Josef Fersterer Jörn-Steffen Pischke Rudolf Winter-Ebmer.
Anne-Sophie Robilliard IRD, DIAL, Paris Are There Returns to Migration Experience? An Empirical Analysis using Data on Return Migrants and Non- Migrants.
1 Do UK higher education students overestimate their starting salary? John Jerrim Institute of Education, University of London.
The route out of the routine: mobility and the changing structure of occupations Craig Holmes and Ken Mayhew International Labour Process.
Rwanda: The impact of conflict on fertility Kati Schindler & Tilman Brück Gender and Conflict Research Workshop 10/06/2010.
Factors affecting fertility The factors affecting population change can be grouped into four categories: –Demographic –Social / Cultural –Economic –Political.
HAOMING LIU JINLI ZENG KENAN ERTUNC GENETIC ABILITY AND INTERGENERATIONAL EARNINGS MOBILITY 1.
Education and training Source: Tito Boeri and Jan van Ours (2008), The Economics of Imperfect Labor Markets, Princeton University Press.
Tasks and Opportunities Within Indian Families Sripad Motiram Lars Osberg Department of Economics, Dalhousie University, Halifax Canadian Economics Association.
Tertiary Education Systems and Labour Markets Report prepared for the OECD Stephen Machin* and Sandra McNally** 1 December 2006 *Centre for Economic Performance,
HIGHER EDUCATION AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INDIA, CHINA, AND THE 21 ST CENTURY Martin Carnoy, Stanford University INDIA, CHINA, AND THE 21 ST CENTURY Martin.
Michael J. Greenwood. Many, many papers and books have dealt with historical U.S. immigration from Europe. These contributions have made solid contributions.
Is College Worth the Cost? Presented By: Thomas Bishop Sejla Karalic Anzhelika Lyubenko Nathan Grace.
FAMILY LEARNING WORKS Susannah Chambers, Head of Family & Intergenerational Learning 23 rd October 2015.
Ch. 9. Investments in Human Capital: Education and Training What are the costs and benefits of obtaining a college degree? What factors affect the number.
Migrant Opportunity and the Educational Attainment of Youth in Rural China Alan de Brauw IFPRI John Giles The World Bank April 10, 2008.
Ch. 9. Investments in Human Capital: Education and Training What are the costs and benefits of obtaining a college degree? What factors affect the number.
6.2 Population Growth: Past, Present, and Future
Determinants of women’s labor force participation and economic empowerment in Albania Juna Miluka University of New York Tirana September, 14, 2015.
STRUCTURAL MODELS Eva Hromádková, Applied Econometrics JEM007, IES Lecture 10.
We take a multi-period model of childhood investment, based on Cuhna, Heckman et al (2005), which distinguishes early from late investments. In particular,
Does High School Homework Increase Academic Achievement? Charlene Marie Kalenkoski Texas Tech University Sabrina Wulff Pabilonia U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Labor Outcomes of Immigrants to the U.S.: Occupational Mobility and Returns to Education Gabriela Sánchez-Soto.
R ETURN TO COMMUTING IN S WEDEN Sergii Troshchenkov PhD student L.A.S.E.R.
Maternal Movements into Part time Employment: What is the Penalty? Jenny Willson, Department of Economics, University of Sheffield.
Jane Mariara, Andy McKay, Andy Newell and Cinzia Rienzo Presented by:
Joseph B Nichols 2008 NASM of the Econometric Society June 21, 2008
University of California, Los Angeles and NBER
Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI)
Presentation transcript:

The Socioeconomic Return to Primary Schooling in Victorian England Jason Long Department of Economics Colby College and University of Oxford March 2006

2 Larger Project: Mobility in 19 th century Great Britain Create large, nationally representative panel data for Victorian Britain. Use it to analyze mobility. ◦Geographic mobility: Internal migration; Rural-urban migration (Long, 2005); Migration to U.S. and Canada ◦Socioeconomic mobility: Intra- and intergenerational mobility; Effect of migration on mobility; Effect of education on mobility Compare results to other, similar countries: U.S. (Long and Ferrie, 2005), France (Bourdieu, Ferrie, Kesztenbaum, 2006) Working under NSF grant SES : “Labor Mobility in Victorian Britain: An Analysis Using Matched Census Data”

3 Why study education in Victorian England? Key element in England’s growth story, especially England’s decline. Long tradition in economic history literature – Landes (1969), Mathias (1969), Crouzet (1982) – of attributing England’s protracted growth slow-down and loss of leadership to its underinvestment in human capital. Earlier historians of the subject – Birchenough (1914), Curtis (1948) – harshly criticize quantity/quality of primary education. England transitioning from voluntary schooling provided by the market to mandatory schooling provided by the state (Education Act, 1870). Later than Germany (1763), U.S.; concurrent with France. Low relative level of primary and secondary schooling in England has been called “the greatest anomaly in global nineteenth century educational history” (Lindert, 2000). Opportunity to study economic return to voluntary primary education – impossible if primary education is universal.

4 Research Questions 1. Who were the students? What were the determinants of schooling? 2. What was the return to schooling, or the “treatment effect” of primary school attendance? Did education offer a path to upward mobility? 3. Was it worth it? Did the benefits outweigh the costs? 4. What can be said about England’s investment in primary education? Was the quality/quantity indeed suboptimal?

5 Results 1.Primary school attendance strongly correlated with father’s SES, household’s opportunity cost of schooling, and school availability. 2.Real but small economic return to primary schooling Pecuniary benefit of schooling easily outweighed cost, but… Return was small relative to effect of other variables (father’s SES, living in urban area) and relative to modern results: 1.3% increase in adult earnings per year of schooling, compared to 5–15% for secondary schooling in developed economies today and 7% for primary schooling in developing economies today. 3.Argues against the most scathing criticisms of 19 th century English primary schooling. 4.Underinvestment not the problem? Return was low, perhaps because of poor school quality, perhaps because of labor market rigidities.

6 Outline Introduction 1.Previous Research 2.The Data 3.Background on Victorian Schools 4.Simple Reduced Form Results A. Determinants of Schooling B. Economic Effect of Schooling 5.Extensions A. Estimating Years of Schooling B. Endogenous School Choice 6.Conclusions and Future Work

7 Previous Research Failure of education in England Landes (1969), Mathias (1969), Crouzet (1982) Defenders of English education West (1970, 1975), Hurt (1971), Sutherland (1971) ◦Adult male literacy ↑ from 67.3% in 1841 to 80.6% in 1871 Effect of education on earnings Card (1999), Harmon & Walker (1995) on developed countries ◦6 / 15% increase in earnings per year of school (OLS / IV) Schultz (2003) on Africa, average of six countries ◦7% increase in earnings per year of primary school (OLS)  Mitch (1984, 1992): Effect of literacy in 19th century England ◦Upward intergenerational mobility for unskilled sons = 48% for literate, 22% for illiterate (1869–73)

8 Problems with Previous Data 19 th Century Marriage Registries Currently, only way to examine socioeconomic mobility in 19 th century Britain Observe father’s and son’s occupation, son’s signature Do not observe school attendance: Literacy  Schooling Signature  Literacy Includes only Anglican ceremonies Father and son at point in time  Does not control for stage of life cycle

9 The Data 2% Sample of 1851 Census + Entire 1881 Census of England and Wales 168,130 men living in England and Wales ↓ New Dataset All 12,640,000 men in the census 28,474 men observed in 1851 and 1881

10 Match Criteria 1.First, last name phonetic match (e.g. “John”/“Jon”; “Aitken”/“Aitkin”). Middle initial match. 2.| Reported Age1881 – (Reported Age ) |  5 3.Birth county and parish match. ◦Approx 16,000 parishes in England and Wales ◦Size: Median = 405, Mean = 1,842  High-resolution information 4.No duplicate matches. 5.No missing information.

11 Example: John Jowitt in 1851 Born 1844, Brotherton, Yorkshire

12 Example: John Jowitt in 1851 Born 1844, Brotherton, Yorkshire

13 Example: John Jowitt in 1881 Born 1844, Brotherton, Yorkshire

14 Example: John Jowitt in 1881 Born 1844, Brotherton, Yorkshire

15 Example: John Jowitt

16 Another Example: Alfred H King and Occupational Mobility

17 Expected Attrition From Death: approx 85,000 From Emigration: approx 13,500  Should match 69,630 (41%) Actual match rate = 17% Matched 23% before discarding duplicates  Difference due to enumeration error (age, name, birthplace; missed)

18 Estimation Sub-sample 1. Potential school age in 1851: between 6 and 13 years old 2. Son in 1851, living with father 3. Labour market information for 1881 and for father: Occupation  Imputed earnings  5,337 school-age sons with solid occupational information

19

20 Making Use of Occupation Enumerators’ Instructions “In trades the master is to be distinguished from the Journeyman and Apprentice, thus- ‘(Carpenter, master employing [6] men)’; inserting always the number of persons of the trade in his employment on March 31st. “In trades where women or boys and girls are employed, the number or each class should be separately given. Where the master is one of a manufacturing or mercantile firm, the entry should be after this form: – ‘Cotton manufacturer – firm of 3, employ 512 men, 273 women, 35 boys, and 272 girls.’”

21 Making Use of Occupation Option 1: Occupational Classification (Armstrong, 1972) Class I.Professional etc., occupations accountant, attorney, surgeon, large employer Class II.Intermediate occupations bookkeeper, manager, farm foreman, craftsman (employer) Class III.Skilled occupations blacksmith, nurseryman, weaver, craftsman (non-employer) Class IV.Partly skilled occupations agricultural labourer, flax dresser, rat destroyer Class V.Unskilled occupations general labourer, rag & paper collector, bone sorter

22 Making Use of Occupation Option 2: Imputed Earnings

23 Students in the Census The Key Occupation: “Scholar” No separate question (as in U.S. census) Definition varied between censuses Best definition – most specific, most restrictive – in 1851: Report children as scholars if older than 5 and were “daily attending school, or receiving regular tuition under a master or governess at home.”

24

25

26

27

28 Simple Reduced Form Models 1.Correlates of School Attendance, 1851: P(s = 1) =  (  1 Father’s SES +  2 Cost +  3 Age +  4 Age 2 +  5 Z) 2.Correlates of Class/Wage, 1881: y i,1881 = f(  1 School Attendance i,  2 y father,  3 X +  ) Potential problems: Observe attendance not duration Attendance endogenous?

29

30 Simple Econometric Models 1.Correlates of School Attendance, 1851: P(s = 1) =  (  1 Father’s SES +  2 Cost +  3 Age +  4 Age 2 +  5 Z) 2.Correlates of Occupational Class/SES, 1881: y i,1881 = f(  1 School Attendance i,  2 y father,  3 X +  ) Most direct, immediate labor market outcome measure is occupational class/SES

31

32

33

34 Extension 1: Estimating Duration of Attendance Age + Attendance in Family Characteristics  Duration Three Assumptions: If attend, begin at age 6 Schooling continuous No school past 13 Then probability of being in school at any age is For example, at age 8 p 8 = p 6 (1 – h 6 )(1 – h 7 ) where h a is the hazard rate at age a. All p ’s observable  All hazards can be recovered

35 Estimating Duration of Attendance, continued Can refine analysis by conditioning on observable characteristics: Z = ( Father’s SES, Siblings’ School Attendance ) Calculate background-specific hazard rates as With the hazard rates in hand, the conditional expectation of total school duration d for an individual of age a and background characteristics z observed to be in school in 1851 is

36 Estimating Duration of Attendance, continued The conditional expectation of total school duration d for an individual of age a and background characteristics z observed to be out of school in 1851 is Back to the example of a = 8: E(d | s=1, a=8) = 3 + (1–h 8 )h 9 + 2(1–h 8 )(1–h 9 )h 10 +  if in school E(d | s=0, a=8) = p 6 h 6 + 2p 6 (1–h 6 ) if out of school

37

38 Previous Research Failure of education in England Landes (1969), Mathias (1969), Crouzet (1982) Defenders of English education West (1970, 1975), Hurt (1971), Sutherland (1971) ◦Adult male literacy ↑ from 67.3% in 1841 to 80.6% in 1871 Effect of education on earnings Card (1999), Harmon & Walker (1995) on developed countries ◦6 / 15% increase in earnings per year of school (OLS / IV) Schultz (2003) on Africa, average of six countries ◦7% increase in earnings per year of primary school (OLS) Mitch (1984, 1992): Effect of literacy in 19th century England ◦Upward intergenerational mobility for unskilled sons = 48% for literate, 22% for illiterate (1869–73)

39 Comparing Benefit and Cost Information on primary school cost from Mitch (1992) ◦Avg weekly fees: 2p (subsidized), 6p (unsubsidized) ◦Approx 67% had access to the cheaper, subsidized rate ◦Average duration: 25 weeks per year ◦Opportunity cost greater, average £2.5/yr  Average total cost of one year = £2.85 Avg annual wage premium of £1.4 for one year of school With work-life of 30 years and  = 0.05, PDV = £16.3 With work-life of 20 years and  = 0.10, PDV = £ 7.1

40 Extension 2: Endogenous School Choice School attendance may not be exogenous. Parents consider net benefit to child of schooling. Potential “ability bias”. Structural Model of Endogenous School Choice (Heckman, 1979, 1990; Harmon & Walker, 1995; many others) Selection of school attendance over non-attendance and treatment effect of schooling jointly estimated by maximum likelihood

41 Identification Identification comes from two sources: Nonlinearity of model – s i appears in wage equation, while s i * appears in school decision equation Variables included in z but excluded from x ◦Schools / 1,000 residents (county) F = 2.50 ◦Older sister in household ◦Number of younger siblings ◦Father's age ◦Percent sons ◦Servant in household F = 2.34  School attendance of siblings F = 78.02

42

43 Summary and Conclusions 1.Primary school attendance strongly correlated with father’s SES, household’s opportunity cost of schooling, and school availability. 2.Real but small economic return to primary schooling Pecuniary benefit of schooling outweighed cost, but… Return was small relative to effect of other variables (father’s SES) and relative to results for secondary school in modern developed economies and primary school in modern developing economies. 3.Argues against the most scathing criticisms of 19 th century English primary schooling. 4.Underinvestment not the problem? Return was low, perhaps because of poor school quality, perhaps because of labor market rigidities.

44 Future Work Develop comparison with U.S. Add Scotland – very different education system Add women – more difficult to match Currently have approximately 5,000. Link university students from 1881 to 1901; expand analysis to economic effect of university education. What did English college grads do? What did Oxbridge grads do? What did US and German college grads do?

The Socioeconomic Return to Primary Schooling in Victorian England Jason Long Department of Economics Colby College and University of Oxford March 2006

46