nep-edu New Economics Papers
on Education
Issue of 2024–12–23
five papers chosen by
Nádia Simões, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa 


  1. Autonomous Schools, Achievement, and Segregation By Irmert, Natalie; Bietenbeck, Jan; Mattisson, Linn; Weinhardt, Felix
  2. Child Penalties, Child Outcomes, and Family Culture By Gould, Eric D.; Lichtinger, Guy
  3. Universal Child Benefit and Child Poverty: The Role of Fertility Adjustments By Gromadzki, Jan
  4. Non-Meritocrats or Choice-Reluctant Meritocrats? A Redistribution Experiment in China and France By Belguise, Margot; huang, yuchen; Mo, Zhexun
  5. Elite Strategies for Big Shocks: The Case of the Fall of the Ming By Carol H. Shiue; Wolfgang Keller

  1. By: Irmert, Natalie (Lund University); Bietenbeck, Jan (Lund University); Mattisson, Linn (Socialstyrelsen); Weinhardt, Felix (European University Viadrina, Frankfurt / Oder)
    Abstract: We study the impact of autonomous schools – publicly funded institutions that operate more independently than government-run schools – on student achievement and school segregation, using data from 15 countries over 16 years. Our triple-differences regressions exploit between-grade variation in the share of students attending autonomous schools within a given country and year. We find that autonomous schools do not raise overall achievement, and our estimates are precise enough to rule out even modest positive effects in math and small positive effects in science. However, these aggregate results mask important heterogeneity, with consistently positive effects for high-socioeconomic-status students and natives, and negative effects for low-socioeconomic-status students and immigrants. In line with these results, we also find that autonomous schools increase segregation by socioeconomic and immigrant status. We conclude that autonomous schools have not generated the anticipated system-wide benefits.
    Keywords: autonomous schools, student achievement, school segregation
    JEL: I21 I24 J15
    Date: 2024–11
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17462
  2. By: Gould, Eric D. (Hebrew University, Jerusalem); Lichtinger, Guy (Harvard University)
    Abstract: This paper analyzes how the "child penalty" associated with career interruptions for women after becoming a mother is influenced by preferences absorbed during childhood, and how the child penalty, in turn, is related to the quantity and quality (education) of her own children. Using linked administrative data on Israeli parents and children, the analysis shows that mothers who grew up in larger and more traditional families marry men from larger families, and together they have more children. Growing up with more siblings is also associated with a larger child penalty for a mother in earnings and employment, as well as in terms of commuting less and moving to "mother friendly" firms at the expense of higher wage firms. The results also indicate that the child penalty produces two opposing effects on child human capital – a negative impact due to the loss of parental income, and a positive influence of increased maternal time away from work. Overall, the evidence suggests that the family preferences and norms absorbed during childhood significantly influence a woman's choices of spouse, fertility, and child penalty later in life – but with little overall impact on her children's high school achievements.
    Keywords: child penalties, child outcomes, family culture
    JEL: J12 J13 J16 J22 J24 J31 J62
    Date: 2024–11
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17455
  3. By: Gromadzki, Jan (Vienna University of Economics and Business)
    Abstract: I study fertility adjustments after the introduction of a large universal child benefit in Poland. The program caused a six percent increase in the number of births. Patterns of selection into parenthood changed significantly and persistently, with a weakening of positive selection based on education and a strengthening of negative selection based on income. The share of births in the bottom half of the income distribution increased from 51 percent to 58 percent. Using a microsimulation approach, I combine changes in the births structure with existing estimates of the transfer's effect on labor supply to study the impact of these adjustments on poverty reduction. These impacts are very small due to the exceptional generosity of the transfer, but they become more pronounced in the middle of the income distribution.
    Keywords: fertility, child benefit, unconditional cash transfer, poverty
    JEL: J13 H31 I38
    Date: 2024–11
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp17456
  4. By: Belguise, Margot; huang, yuchen; Mo, Zhexun
    Abstract: Recent experimental evidence contends that meritocratic ideals are mainly a Western phenomenon. Intriguingly, the Chinese public does not appear to differentiate between merit- and luck-based inequalities, despite China’s historical emphasis on meritocratic institutions. We propose that this phenomenon could be due to the Chinese public’s greater reluctance to make an active choice in real-stake redistribution decisions. We run an incentivized redistribution experiment with elite university students in China and France, by varying the initial split of payoffs between two real-life workers to redistribute from. We show that, compared to French respondents, Chinese respondents consistently and significantly choose more non-redistribution across both highly unequal and relatively equal status quo scenarios. Additionally, we also find that Chinese respondents do differentiate between merit- and luck-based inequalities, and do not redistribute less than the French, excluding the individuals who engage in non-redistribution choices. Chinese respondents are also as reactive as the French towards scenarios with noisy signals of merit, such as inequalities of opportunities. Ultimately, we contend that the reluctance to make an active choice is indicative of diminished political agency to act upon redistribution decisions with real-life stakes, rather than apathy, inattention, having benefited from the status quo in Chinese society or libertarian preferences among the Chinese. Notably, our findings show that Chinese individuals’ reluctance to make a choice is particularly pronounced among those from families of working-class and farming backgrounds, while it is absent among individuals whose families have closer ties to the private sector. (Stone Center on Socio-Economic Inequality Working Paper)
    Date: 2024–11–21
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:osf:socarx:vcuzp
  5. By: Carol H. Shiue; Wolfgang Keller
    Abstract: This paper documents persistence in the power of elite families in Central China despite dynastic change. We study the impact of the fall of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) on couples and their descendants (treatment of people), and present evidence on the response of multigenerational family lines to a big shock. Local Ming elites suffered a decline in influence in the short run, but in the long-run their descendants recovered and tightened their grip on power in their role as the elites of the new Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). In contrast to the recovery of family lines, the fall of Ming had a more persistently negative impact on the regions that historically were most strongly negatively affected by the shock (treatment of regions). The paper suggests that the elite reversal is due to trauma caused by Ming destruction that shifted norms towards the most socially respectable career paths based on the civil service exam; these norms were, to a greater degree, intergenerationally transmitted in family lines that suffered more from the destruction in the fall of the Ming dynasty.
    JEL: N35
    Date: 2024–11
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:33121

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