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9780199693382

Wages, School Quality, and Employment Demand

by ; ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780199693382

  • ISBN10:

    0199693382

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2011-12-17
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

David Card and Alan B. Krueger have made substantial contributions to the field of Labor Economics. Their influential work focuses on policy-relevant issues and spans vast and important topics, including: unemployment, minimum wage, migration, measurement error, unions, wage differentials among various groups in the US, labor demand, social insurance, and technological change. Card and Krueger have also been extremely influential in econometrics methodology; they were at the forefront of employing an 'experimental' approach in their research design and implementation. Both of these IZA prize winners have made significant methodological contributions on instrumental variable estimation, measurement error, regression discontinuity methods, and the use of 'natural' experiments. This book provides an overview of their most important work and is divided two main parts: the first section focuses on school quality and the differences in wages across groups in the US; the second part concentrates on the effect of changes in the minimum wage on employment and wage setting. In section introductions, Card and Krueger offer their insight into these two areas and discuss the historical context for their research.

Table of Contents

Introduction by the Editors: Ingenuity and Creativityp. 1
School Quality, Earnings, and Black-White Wage Differences
Introductionp. 7
Does School Quality Matter? Returns to Education and the Characteristics of Public Schools in the United Statesp. 12
An Empirical Framework for Modeling Returns to Schoolingp. 14
Functional Formp. 16
Measures of the Quality of Public Schoolingp. 20
Returns to Education by Cohort and State of Birth for White Menp. 24
Rates of Return to Education by State and Cohortp. 24
Rates of Return and the Quality of Schoolsp. 29
Other Characteristics of Schools and Statesp. 33
Adjustments for Mobility of Preschool and School-Age Childrenp. 39
Log-Linear Specificationp. 40
The Effects of School Quality on Education and Earningsp. 41
Location and Shape of the Earnings-Education Relationshipp. 41
Reduced-Form Estimatesp. 45
Conclusionsp. 47
p. 49
p. 51
School Quality and Black-White Relative Earnings: A Direct Assessmentp. 53
The Evolution of Black-White Earnings:1960-1980p. 55
The Importance of Southern-Born Workers for the Black-White Wage Gapp. 60
Two Kinds of Schoolsp. 67
Interstate Differences in Relative Black-White School Qualityp. 70
School Quality and the Return to Educationp. 73
The Returns to Education by Racep. 75
Estimation Resultsp. 79
The Effect of School Quality Before the Civil Rights Actp. 84
Additional Aspects of School Qualityp. 85
School Quality and the Black-White Wage Gap: Reduced-Form Estimatesp. 88
Conclusionsp. 94
p. 95
p. 97
p. 99
School Resources and Student Outcomes: An Overview of the Literature and New Evidence from North and South Carolinap. 101
Theoretical Frameworkp. 104
Empirical Findingsp. 107
A Comparison of North and South Carolinap. 114
Conclusionsp. 119 Appendix
Experimental Estimates of Education Production Functionsp. 122
Background on Project STAR and Datap. 125
Design and Implementationp. 125
Data and Standardized Testsp. 131
Statistical Modelsp. 134
Effects of Attritionp. 137
Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) Modelsp. 142
Models with Pooled Datap. 144
Heterogeneous Treatment Effectsp. 148
Hawthorne and John Henry Effectsp. 150
Separate Subject Test Results for SAT and BSFp. 151
Conclusionsp. 152
p. 155
Minimum Wages and Employment Demand
Introductionp. 156
Using Regional Variation in Wages to Measure the Effects of the Federal Minimum Wagep. 160
Minimum Wage Statutes in 1989-1990p. 161
The Effect on Teenagers: An Overviewp. 162
A Grouped Analysisp. 168
An Analysis by Statep. 172
Conclusionsp. 179
Minimum Wages and Employment: A Case Study of the Fast-Food Industry in New Jersey and Pennsylvaniap. 181
The New Jersey Lawp. 183
Sample Design and Evaluationp. 183
Employment Effects of the Minimum-Wage Increasep. 189
Differences in Differencesp. 189
Regression-Adjusted Modelsp. 191
Specification Testsp. 194
Full-Time and Part-Time Substitutionp. 197
Other Employment-Related Measuresp. 199
Nonwage Offsetsp. 200
Price Effects of the Minimum-Wage Increasep. 201
Store Openingsp. 203
Broader Evidence on Employment Changes in New Jerseyp. 205
Interpretationp. 206
Standard Competitive Modelp. 206
Alternative Modelsp. 207
Conclusionsp. 208
A Re-Analysis of the Effect of the New Jersey Minimum Wage with Representative Payroll Datap. 210
Analysis of Representative BLS Fast-Food Restaurant Samplep. 213
Description of BLS ES-202 Datap. 213
Summary Statistics and Differences-in-Differencesp. 215
Regression-Adjusted Modelsp. 218
Specification Testsp. 220
Repeated Cross Sections from the BLSES-202 Datap. 223
The Effect of the 1996 Federal Minimum-Wage Increasep. 225
A Re-analysis of the Berman-Neumark Wascher (BNW) Data Setp. 226
Genesis of the BNW Samplep. 226
Basic Resultsp. 228
Regression-Adjusted Modelsp. 229
Alternative Specifications and Samplesp. 232
Consistency of the BNW Sample with the Card-Krueger and BLS Samplesp. 235
Patterns of Employment Changes Within New Jerseyp. 240
Other Evidence for the Eating and Drinking Industryp. 242
Conclusionsp. 245
Unexpected Inflation, Real Wages, and Employment Determination in Union Contractsp. 247
Employment and Wages in a Simple Contract Modelp. 249
Interpreting the Correlation of Employment and Wagesp. 249
Specification of the Employment Demand Functionp. 252
Allowing for the Presence of Efficient Contractingp. 253
Data Description and Measurement Frameworkp. 254
The Effect of Previous Wage Rates on Subsequent Wage Determinationp. 260
The Determinants of Contractual Employmentp. 263
Conclusionsp. 269
p. 270
Concluding Thoughtsp. 274
Notesp. 276
Referencesp. 292
Indexp. 302
About the Authors and the Editorsp. 308
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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