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Empirical Education Research

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Title: Empirical Education Research


1
Empirical Education Research
  • Lent Term
  • Lecture 3
  • Dr. Radha Iyengar

2
Last Time
  • Model of Human Capital Acquisition
  • Choose optimal schooling where MBMC
  • For some individuals, MC lower because of ability
    (ability bias)
  • For some individuals, MB higher because of
    group/family factors (heterogeneity)
  • IV estimates my be unbiased for a given
    subgroup but the returns in that subgroup may be
    very different than other groups

3
Topics Covered Today
  • Broadly 3 Major Strands of Empirical Research
  • Returns to Education (Ability Bias)
  • Angrist and Krueger
  • Ashenfelter and Rouse
  • Credit Constraints and Education Investment
  • Carneiro and Heckman
  • Dynarski
  • Education Production Function
  • Hanushek
  • Krueger
  • Hoxby
  • Rouse and Figlio

4
Estimating Returns to Education
  • Generally 3 approaches
  • Cross-sectional variation (Mincer Regression)
  • Within group differences
  • Instrumental Variables

5
Mincer Regression
  • log( y ) a bS cX dX2 e
  • Estimated worldwide with estimates ranging from
    0.05 to 0.15
  • Linear model fits the data well even in countries
    with very different economies, education system,
    etc.

6
Source Angrist and Lindhal (2001) JEL
7
Issues with Mincer Regression
  • How to interpret the coefficient on schooling?
  • Ability bias Upward bias
  • Heterogeneity in effects ???
  • Measurement Error Downward bias
  • Signalling vs. Human Capital (next week)
  • In practice, OLS seems to be slightly, though not
    significantly smaller than the IV approaches

8
Simple Solution to Ability Bias
  • The simplest way of dealing with this problem is
    to find a measure of ability (IQ, AFQT, or
    similar) BUT
  • no good reason to expect the relative ability
    bias to be constant across people
  • This is especially a problem if b differs across
    ages and other groups
  • Also the relationship between ability and
    schooling varies greatly across time and
    individuals.

9
Instrumental Variables
  • Basic goal Find something that varies schooling
    but is uncorrelated with unobserved factors (e.g.
    ability)
  • Estimate the component of schooling predicted by
    instrument
  • Use predicted schooling (rather than actual
    schooling) to estimate relationship between
    schooling and earnings

10
Various Instruments
  • Card Proximity to 2-Year or 4-Year colleges
    Parents education
  • Kane Rouse Tuition at local 2-year and 4-year
    colleges
  • Angrist Krueger Quarter-of-birth and
    compulsory schooling laws

11
Compulsory Schooling IV
  • Angrist and Krueger (AK) use quarter of birth as
    an instrument for education to determine the
    impact of education on earnings.
  • quarter of birth impacts education attainment b/c
    compulsory schooling laws,
  • this source of schooling variation is
    uncorrelated with other factors influencing
    earnings,

12
Does quarter of birth affect education?
  • Regress de-trended education outcomes on quarter
    of birth dummy variables
  • (individual i, cohort c, birth quarter j,
    education outcome E, birth quarter Q)
  • This shows that Q does impact education outcomes
    such as total years of education and high school
    graduation.

13
Is Schooling related to Quarter of Birth?
14
Is this due to compulsory schooling laws?- 1
  • Indirect evidence
  • Examine impact of birth quarter on post-secondary
    outcomes that are not expected to be affected by
    compulsory schooling laws.
  • No birth quarter impact on post-secondary
    outcomes is consistent with a theory that
    compulsory schooling laws are behind the birth
    quarter-education relationship for secondary
    education.

15
Is this due to compulsory schooling laws?- 2
  • Direct evidence Construct a difference-in-differe
    nce measure of schooling law impact between high
    age requirement states and low age requirement
    states
  • Eage 16, high is the fraction of 16 year olds
    enrolled in high school in states where
    attendance in mandatory up to age 17 or 18)

16
How to estimate OLS
  • Wald estimate compares the overall difference in
    education and earnings between Q1 and Q2-4
    individuals
  • Consistency requires that the grouping variable
    (Q) is correlated with education (Educ), but
    uncorrelated with wage determinants other than
    education.
  • For instance, this assumes that ability is
    distributed uniformly throughout the year.

17
Difference-in-Differences estimate of about 4
Decreasing effect over time. Maybe because of
increasing returns to college
18
IV Estimates
  • Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) uses quarter of
    birth to predict education, then regresses wage
    on this predicted value of education to estimate
    the return to education (?)
  • First stage
  • Second stage

19
Correlation between QOB and Schooling
20
IV Estimates of Return to Schooling
21
Summary of AK
  • Quarter of birth is a valid instrument affects
    educational attainment through compulsory
    schooling laws, not through unobserved ability
  • First quarter individuals (who enter school at an
    older age and can leave earlier too) receive
    about 0.1 fewer years of schooling and are 1.9
    less likely to graduate from HS than those born
    in the fourth quarter.
  • Quarter of birth is found to be unrelated to
    post-secondary educational outcomes.
  • Between 10 to 33 of potential drop outs are kept
    in school due to compulsory attendance laws.
  • Returns to an additional year of schooling are
    remarkably similar to those estimated with OLS,
    approximately 7.5 depending on the specification.

22
What about variation in marginal benefits?
  • Think that marginal benefits different for
    different people
  • Want to see how shifts in marginal benefit curve
    affect investment in schooling
  • Need assumption on how marginal benefits vary

23
Within Family Estimates
  • Some of the unobserved differences that bias a
    cross-sectional comparison of education and
    earnings are based on family characteristics
  • Within families, these differences should be
    fixed.
  • Observe multiple individuals with exactly the
    same family effect, then we could difference out
    the group effect

24
Estimating Family Averages
  • Can look at differences within family effect
  • This of this as a different CEF for each family
  • EYij -Yj S, X, f a b(Sij Sj) c(Xij
    Xj) c(X2ij X2j)
  • The way we estimate this

25
What makes this believable
  • No within family differences
  • Might be a problem with siblings generally
  • Parents invest differently
  • Cohort related differencesinfluence siblings
    differently
  • Different inherited endowment
  • More believable with identical twins

26
A twins sample
  • Ashenfelter and Rouse (AR) Collect data at the
    Twins festival in Twinsburg Ohio
  • Survey twins
  • Are you identical? If both say yesthen included
  • Ever worked in past two years
  • Earnings, education, and other characteristics
  • Useful because also get two measures of shared
    characteristics, so can control for measurement
    error

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Comparing twins to others
  • Sample at Twinsburg NOT a random sample of twins
  • Benefit more likely to be similar because
    attendees are into their twinness
  • Cost not necessarily generalizable, even to
    other twin
  • Attendees select segment of the population
  • Generally Richer, Whiter, More Educated, etc.
  • Worry about heterogeneity of effects across some
    of these categories

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Wheres the variation
  • Recall our estimating equation
  • If Sij is the same in both twins, no contribution
    to estimate of b
  • Only estimated off of twins who are different
    from each other in schooling investments

32
Correlation Matrix for Twins
Education of twin 1, reported by twin1
Education of twin 1, reported by twin2
ALL of the identification for b comes from the
25 of twins who dont have the same schooling
33
Summary of AR
  • Consistent with past literaturereturns around
    8-10
  • OLS estimate slight upward bias but with
    measurement error theres a slight downward bias
  • Ability bias less of a problem than measurement
    error

34
General Conclusions on RTS
  • Returns appear to be between 8-12 percent in the
    US
  • Not much different between OLS, IV, and within
    family estimators
  • Maybe ability bias not as much of problem as we
    thought
  • Maybe theres an offsetting bias (marginal
    benefits, measurement error etc.)
  • Maybe the estimation strategies are not
    eliminating the source of the biasi.e. some
    other factor is affecting all these estimates.

35
Credit Constraints and Education
  • Were always assuming selection into education
    (esp higher education) on ability but may also be
    on resources
  • Cant borrow against future earnings so if dont
    have high asset endowment, hard to afford extra
    schooling
  • References
  • Carneiro and Heckman (2002) The Evidence on
    credit constraints in Post-Secondary Schooling
    Economic Journal 112 705-734
  • Dynarski (2003) Does Aid Matter Measuring the
    Effect of Student Aid on College Completion
    American Economic Review 93(1)

36
Attending College related to Parents Income
37
How do Credit Constraints affect RTS Estimates?
  • IV estimates of the wage returns to schooling
    (the Mincer coefficient) exceed least squares
    estimates (OLS) is consistent with short term
    credit constraints.
  • The instruments used in the literature are
    invalid because they are uncorrelated with
    schooling or they are correlated with omitted
    abilities.
  • Even granting the validity of the instruments, IV
    may exceed least squares estimates even if there
    are no short term credit constraints

38
The Quality Margin
  • The OLS-IV argument neglects the choice of
    quality of schooling.
  • Constrained people may choose low quality schools
    and have lower estimated Mincer coefficients
    (rates of return) and not higher ones.
  • Accounting for quality, the instruments used in
    the literature are invalid because they are
    determinants of potential earnings.

39
The general issue
  • Individuals cannot offer their future earnings as
    collateral to finance current education
  • Individuals from poorer families with limited
    access to credit will have more trouble raising
    funds to cover college
  • This affects
  • Attendance in college
  • Completion of college
  • Quality/content of education

40
Two theories for the facts
  • Higher income parents produce higher ability
    children or invest more in their children
  • Access to credit means low-income individuals
    dont attend college, reducing their human
    capital and reinforcing the relationship between
    schooling and earnings

41
Return to our model
  • Lets ignore experience (for ease) and so
    consider the model
  • Lets also define the wages in for two groups
    College Grad and HS Grads
  • specific decision rule on college attendance
  • S 1 if Y1 Y0 C gt 0, and S 0 otherwise.
  • We can think of C as representing the costs of
    schooling (e.g. tuition)

42
Defining IV and OLS Estimates
  • Suppose the true model we want to estimate is
  • Then for an instrument Z , our OLS and IV
    estimates are

43
Why might IV be bigger than OLS
  • Taking homogeneous returns, if we believe ?gt0,
    then IV gt OLS if
  • Or rescaling and taking the case were COV(Z,S)gt0

44
Source Carneiro and Heckman (2002)
45
Estimating the effect of Costs
  • Suppose the instruments are valid and b varies
    across the population
  • Let C0 then individuals with higher b will get
    more schooling
  • The returns to schooling are
  • Same true if C not to big and not too strongly
    correlated with Y1 Y0

46
High costs not so correlated with RTS
people with characteristics that make them more
likely to go to school have higher returns on
average than those with characteristics that make
them less likely to go to school.
47
Negative Selection
  • Individuals with high b also have high C then
  • Marginal entrants to college have higher average
    returns than the population average
  • In the extreme dumb kids have rich parents,
    smart kids have poor parents
  • IV estimates will isolate returns of smart kids
    and will exacerbate ability bias relative to OLS

48
High costs correlated with RTS
49
Does increase Aid increase College Attendance
Source Dynarski, 2003
50
Empirical Evidence for Credit Constraints
  • Not much to support itsome evidence of responses
    to subsidies but
  • Mostly go to people likely to go to college
    anyway
  • Hard to separate out relaxing credit constraints
    from subsidizing for marginal, unconstrained
    individuals
  • Other margins of adjustment
  • Reduce cost and reduce quality
  • education of low-income individuals not
    comparable to high-income

51
Education Production
  • If education is valuable good (i.e. it has high
    returns)need to worry about how it is produced
  • If cant get adjustments on the quantity
    marginmaybe we can get it at the quality margin
  • Usually think about education as representing
    some intangible thing thats valuable
  • Responsible people
  • Democratic values

52
Production Function
  • Define
  • Eist f( NSist, Rist, Xist, e)
  • NS Non school inputs, not under control of
    school s in year t
  • Innate ability of students
  • Parents wealth
  • R School inputs NOT under control of school s in
    year t
  • Resources
  • Student type (peers)
  • X School inputs under control of school s in
    year t
  • Class size
  • Teacher quality
  • curriculum

53
Estimation
  • Usually dont worry about function formjust
    think of it linearly
  • Eist a ßNSist ?Rist dXist eist
  • Can look at the effect of change in any of the
    factors on education
  • Usually looking to estimate either d (Returns to
    resource investment) or ?
  • Often end up estimate d ?

54
Outcome measures
  • Choice matters
  • depends on what you think the intervention/investm
    ent will effect
  • Depends on what makes education productive
  • Common choice
  • Wages
  • HS graduation/college attendance
  • Test scores
  • Frequent
  • Cheap
  • Noisy but correlated with stuff we care about

55
What to estimate
  • Value added model
  • Change in outcomes
  • Eist Eist-1
  • Control for whats new to students in current
    year
  • Eist a ?Eist-1 ßNSist ?Rist dXist
    eist
  • These are the same if ?1

56
What have people found?
  • Hanushek (1997) JEL meta-analysis
  • Aggregate across papers
  • No clear relationship between inputs and
    schooling
  • Krueger (2003)
  • Weight papers equally systematic positive
    relationship
  • Weight papers in proportion to number of
    estimates, not related
  • Tennessee Star Experiment

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Issues with the literature
  • Class size coefficient mixes up two things
  • Resources put into teachers (e.g. salary)
  • Teacher pupil ratio
  • Define log expenditures as EXP, log teacher pupil
    ratio at TP and log teacher salary as L, which
    are related as follows
  • EXP L T

60
Model of production
  • The true model we want to estimate is
  • E( y ) a tTP ?L
  • If instead we estimate, we have a problem
  • If proportionate changes in the teacher-pupil
    ratio and teacher pay have equal effects on
    achievement, ? will be zero.

61
Why might class-size be important
  • Lazear (1999) presents a simple model of
    class-size in
  • probability of a child disrupting a class is
    independent across children,
  • the probability of disruption is intuitively
    increasing in class size.
  • Assuming that disruptions require teachers to
    suspend teaching it will tend to reduce the
    amount of learning for everyone in the class.
  • There may be other benefits to smaller classes as
    well such as closer supervision or better
    tailoring to individual students.

62
Evidence on Class Size-1
  • Tennessee Star Experiment
  • Students randomly assigned to one of 3
    class-types
  • Small (13-17 students)
  • Regular(22-25 students)
  • Regular Teachers aid
  • Newly entering students randomly assigned to one
    of the class-types
  • Continue assignment through 3rd grade
  • Analyzed by Krueger (QJE, 1999)

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Distribution of treatment effects
65
Class size Evidence-2
  • Maimonides Rule (Angrist and Lavy)
  • Use rule in Israel to determine class-size
  • 25 students 1 teacher
  • 25-49 students 1 teacher aide
  • 50 students 2 teachers

66
Maimonides Rule
67
Using predicted class-size
68
Reduced Form Estimates
69
IV Estimates
70
General Class-size Evidence
  • On balance probably increase test scores
  • Even at young ages, after first year gains from
    increase test scores smaller
  • In later years, gains smaller
  • Heterogeneous and about 1/3 of students may not
    gain in smaller classes

71
School Incentives
  • Broadly two types of studies
  • Incentives from competition (vouchers, increased
    number of schools in an area, etc.)
  • Incentives from monitoring/accountability
    standards (e.g. NCLB)
  • Other work on increases in teacher pay, but hard
    to separate selection from incentives in
    increased performance

72
School competition
  • Best evidence probably from Hoxby (2000) uses
    streams to identify school district boundary. IV
    estimates suggest school competition helps
  • Criticism from Rothstein sensitivity to
    specification and definition of stream. Results
    might not be that robust

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School Accountability
  • Mixed Evidence
  • Rouse (QJE, 1998)
  • Wisconsin vouchers program gave students in low
    performing schools vouchers to private school
  • Gains in math, no gains in reading
  • Rouse (JPubEc, 2006)
  • Look at FL program, similar to NCLB, imposes
    standards and if fall below standards, close
    schools and issue vouchers.
  • Changes in raw test scores show large
    improvements associated with the threat of
    vouchers.
  • much of this estimated effect may be due to other
    factors.
  • The relative gains in reading are largely
    explained by changing student characteristics
  • the gains in math are limited to the high-stakes
    grade.

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