The intergenerational effects of increasing parental schooling: Evidence from Zimbabwe

Type Working Paper
Title The intergenerational effects of increasing parental schooling: Evidence from Zimbabwe
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2010
URL http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/conferences/2010-EdiA/papers/325-Ramachandran.pdf
Abstract
After independence in 1980, the new government of Zimbabwe implemented a substantial
reform to correct the racially-segregated educational system inherited from
colonialism. A key element of the reform was the elimination of restrictions to progress
from primary to secondary school. Primary school graduates in 1980 entered secondary
school at a rate 4 times higher than those in 1979. We exploit the fuzzy discontinuity
implicit in this natural experiment to test primarily for mother-to-child transmission
of education. We find that a one year increase in the mother’s education causes an
increase in the children’s education by about 5 percent of a standard deviation. We
show that our findings are unlikely to be driven by other confounding factors.

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