97 research outputs found

    The Convergence of Compulsory Schooling in Western Europe: 1950-2000

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    This paper examines the expansion of compulsory schooling in fifteen Western European countries over the period 1950-2000. We show that a convergence process of mandatory years of schooling has occurred across these countries since 1950. We argue that the major driver of this phenomenon is the existence of decreasing aggregate returns to education that have limited the extension of compulsory schooling. Then we test whether convergence still holds when confronted with other explanations described in the literature, which are respectively based on technology and trade, institutions, and the budget constraint of governments. Conditional convergence does hold and we find that openness has been another robust determinant of compulsory years of schooling, reflecting the need of education in an increasingly globalized world.Economic history, education, convergence, globalization

    American Education in the Age of Mass Migrations 1870-1930

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    This paper derives original series of average years of schooling in the United States 1870-1930, which take into account the impact of mass migrations on the US educational level. We reconstruct the foreign-born US population by age and by country of origin, while combining data on the flow of migrants by country and the age pyramids of migrants by country. Then we use original data on educational attainment in the nineteenth century presented in Morrisson and Murtin (2008) in order to estimate the educational level of US immigrants by age and by country. As a result, our series are consistent with the first national estimates of average schooling in 1940. We show that mass migrations have had a significant but modest impact on the US average educational attainment. However, the educational gap between US natives and immigrants was large and increased with the second immigration wave, a phenomenon that most likely fostered the implementation of restrictive immigration rules in the 1920s.economic history, migrations, education, economic development research

    The convergence process of compulsory schooling in Western Europe: 1950-2000

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    This paper examines the expansion of compulsory schooling in fifteen Western European countries over the period 1950-2000. We show that a convergence process of mandatory years of schooling has occurred across these countries since 1950. We argue that the major driver of this phenomenom is the existence of diminishing returns to education that limit the extension of compulsory schooling. Then we test whether convergence still holds when one controls for the major three alternative explanations described in the literature, which are respectively based on technology and trade, institutions, and the budget constraint of governments. Conditional convergence does hold and we find that openness, membership of the European Union, urbanization and illiteracy rates are other significant determinants of compulsory years of schooling over this period.economic history ; education ; convergence

    The Century of Education

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    This paper presents a historical database on educational attainment in 74 countries for the period 1870-2010, using perpetual inventory methods before 1960 and then the Cohen and Soto (2007) database. The correlation between the two sets of average years of schooling in 1960 is equal to 0.96. We use a measurement error framework to merge the two databases, while correcting for a systematic measurement bias in Cohen and Soto (2007) linked to differential mortality across educational groups. Descriptive statistics show a continuous spread of education that has accelerated in the second half of the twentieth century. We find evidence of fast convergence in years of schooling for a sub-sample of advanced countries during the 1870-1914 globalization period, and of modest convergence since 1980. Less advanced countries have been excluded from the convergence club in both cases.Inequality, human capital, economic history, copula function

    The century of education

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    This paper presents a historical database on educational attainment in 74 countries for the period 1870-2010, using perpetual inventory methods before 1960 and then the Cohen and Soto (2007) database. The correlation between the two sets of average years of schooling in 1960 is equal to 0.96. We use a measurement error framework to merge the two databases, while correcting for a systematic measurement bias in Cohen and Soto (2007) linked to differential mortality across educational groups. Descriptive statistics show a continuous spread of education that has accelerated in the second half of the twentieth century. We find evidence of fast convergence in years of schooling for a sub-sample of advanced countries during the 1870-1914 globalization period, and of modest convergence since 1980. Less advanced countries have been excluded from the convergence club in both cases.education ; economic history ; database

    The Kuznets Curve of Education: A Global Perspective on Education Inequalities

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    This paper describes global trends in average educational attainment and in education inequality since 1870, improving the database released by Morrisson-Murtin (2009). Inequality in years of schooling is found to be rapidly decreasing, a direct consequence of the decline in illiteracy. Then, we turn to human capital inequality, and focus, among several other alternatives, on a Mincerian production function of human capital that accounts for diminishing returns to schooling. Within countries, we find evidence of an inverted U-shape curve for human capital inequality, namely a Kuznets curve of education. At the world level, human capital inequality has followed a similar pattern, first increasing from 1870 to 1970, then decreasing.Inequality, human capital, economic history, Kuznets curve.

    The Century of Education

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    This paper presents a historical database on educational attainment in 74 countries for the period 1870-2010, using perpetual inventory methods before 1960 and then the Cohen and Soto (2007) database. The correlation between the two sets of average years of schooling in 1960 is equal to 0.96. We use a measurement error framework to merge the two databases, while correcting for a systematic measurement bias in Cohen and Soto (2007) linked to differential mortality across educational groups. Descriptive statistics show a continuous spread of education that has accelerated in the second half of the twentieth century. We find evidence of fast convergence in years of schooling for a sub-sample of advanced countries during the 1870-1914 globalization period, and of modest convergence since 1980. Less advanced countries have been excluded from the convergence club in both cases.Education, school enrolment, inequality

    Have more strictly regulated banking systems fared better during the recent financial crisis?

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    We assess whether during the recent financial crisis banking systems in countries with more stringent prudential banking regulation have proved more stable. We find indicators of regulatory strength to be relatively well correlated with the extent to which countries have escaped damage during the recent crisis, as measured either by the degree of equity value destruction in the banking sector or by the fiscal cost of financial sector rescue.Prudential regulation; banking; stability; financial crisis; crisis cost; banking sector bail-out; banking share prices.

    Education inequalities and the Kuznets curves: a global perspective since 1870

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    This paper presents a new dataset on educational attainment (primary, secondary and tertiary schooling) at the world level since 1870. Inequality in years of schooling is found to be rapidly decreasing, but we show that this result is completely driven by the decline in illiteracy. Then, we turn to inequality in human capital and focus on a Mincerian production function that accounts for diminishing returns to schooling. It explains the negative cross-country correlation between Mincerian returns to schooling and average schooling contrary to other functional forms. As a result, we show that world human capital inequality has increased since 1870, but does not exceed 10% of world income inequality. Next, we analyse the relationships between the national distributions of income and schooling. We show that human capital within countries exhibits an inverted U-shaped curve with respect to average schooling, namely a "Kuznets curve of education". We find that the usual Kuznets curve of income inequality is significant both in pooled and fixed-effects regressions over the period 1870-2000, and is robust to the inclusion of other variables in the regression such as schooling and human capital inequality. However, the "Kuznets effect" associated to GDP per capita is four times smaller in magnitude than the externality of average schooling favouring the decrease of income inequality within countries since 1870.Ce papier prĂ©sente une nouvelle base de donnĂ©es sur l'Ă©ducation (primaire, secondaire, supĂ©rieure) au niveau mondial depuis 1870. L'inĂ©galitĂ© du nombre d'annĂ©es Ă©tude a dĂ©cru rapidement, mais nous montrons que ce rĂ©sultat est entiĂšrement gouvernĂ© par le dĂ©clin de l'illettrisme. Puis nous nous concentrons sur l'inĂ©galitĂ© de capital humain en considĂ©rant une fonction de production prenant en compte les rendements dĂ©croissants de l'Ă©ducation. Ceux-ci expliquent la corrĂ©lation nĂ©gative entre les rendements MincĂ©riens de l'Ă©ducation et l'Ă©ducation moyenne, contrairement Ă  d'autres formes fonctionnelles. Nous montrons que l'inĂ©galitĂ© mondiale en capital humain a augmentĂ© depuis 1870, mais n'excĂšde pas 10% de l'inĂ©galitĂ© mondiale des revenus. Puis, nous analysons la relation entre les distributions nationales de revenu et d'Ă©ducation. Nous montrons que le capital humain des pays suit une courbe en U inversĂ©e, sorte de courbe de Kuznets du capital humain. De plus, la courbe de Kuznets de l'inĂ©galitĂ© des revenus est significative Ă  la fois dans les rĂ©gressions en coupe et en panel sur la pĂ©riode 1870-2000, et est robuste Ă  l'inclusion d'autres variables explicatives comme l'Ă©ducation et l'inĂ©galitĂ© du capital humain. Cependant, l'effet associĂ© Ă  la courbe de Kuznets Ă  travers le PIB par tĂȘte est 4 fois infĂ©rieur en valeur absolue Ă  l'externalitĂ© de l'Ă©ducation qui a entraĂźnĂ© la diminution de l'inĂ©galitĂ© des revenus Ă  l'intĂ©rieur des pays depuis 1870
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