Type | Report |
Title | Father's education and children's human capital: Evidence from the World War II GI Bill |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | http://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/31340/1/571799981.pdf |
Abstract | Children who grow up in more highly educated families have better labor market outcomes as adults than those who grow up in less educated families, but we do not know whether this is because education bestows parents with skills that make them better parents or because unobservable endowments that contribute to the parents’ educational levels are shared by their children. This paper attempts to improve our understanding of the causal processes that contribute to intergenerational immobility by exploiting variation in fathers’ education induced by the World War II G.I. Bill. I use two different identification strategies, both of which rest on the timing of the war: the G.I. bill had different effects on different cohorts depending on their likelihood of military service and the probability that their schooling had been completed before the war began. The two different strategies establish upper and lower bounds on the causal impact of father’s schooling: I find that a one year increase in a father’s education reduces the probability that his child is retained in school by between two to four percentage points. This implies that parental schooling levels have an affect on children’s outcomes that is independent of their innate ability and suggests that public policies aimed at increasing educational attainment may have important intergenerational effects. |
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