Make your own luck: The wage gains from starting college in a bad economy
Publication date
2023-10
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Abstract
Using data for nearly 40 cohorts of American college graduates and exploiting regional variation in economic conditions, we show robust evidence of a positive relationship between the unemployment rate at the time of college enrollment and subsequent annual earnings, particularly for women. This positive relationship is not driven by selection into employment or by economic conditions at the time of labor market entry. It also cannot be explained by differential sorting into college majors or post-graduate education. Up to one third of the effect is accounted for by sorting towards more remunerative locations. The results are consistent with a behavioral change that induces individuals who experience bad economic times at the beginning of their studies to exert more effort toward obtaining higher paying jobs.
Keywords
Business cycle, Cohort effects, Higher education, Economics and Econometrics, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth, SDG 4 - Quality Education
Citation
Bičáková, A, Cortes, G M & Mazza, J 2023, 'Make your own luck: The wage gains from starting college in a bad economy', Labour Economics, vol. 84, 102411, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.labeco.2023.102411