Education transmission and network formation
Education transmission and network formation
We propose a model of intergenerational transmission of education wherein children belong to either highly educated or low-educated families. Children choose the intensity of their social activities while parents decide how much educational effort to exert. Using data on adolescents in the United States, we structurally estimate this model and find that, on average, children's homophily acts as a complement to the educational effort of highly educated parents but as a substitute for the educational effort of low-educated parents.
We also perform some counterfactual policy simulations. We find that policies that subsidize kids' socialization efforts can backfire for low-educated students because they tend to increase their interactions with other low-educated students (i.e., homophily), which reduces the education effort of their parents and, thus, their chance of becoming educated. On the contrary, policies that increase heterophily by favoring friendship links between kids from different education backgrounds can be effective in reducing the education gap between
them.
Boucher, Vincent
95fd1e3f-761c-472b-8fe6-f3bd583eb8ae
Del Bello, Carlo L.
19dae353-74f4-4ed3-a451-47be474e1042
Panebianco, Fabrizio
88087e20-bdd3-4853-8102-cd023d954e39
Verdier, Thierry
87c483ea-f473-408f-9776-d0381cab6454
Zenou, Yves
38bf0c72-462b-4c08-8fd1-ce365b0296dc
30 October 2021
Boucher, Vincent
95fd1e3f-761c-472b-8fe6-f3bd583eb8ae
Del Bello, Carlo L.
19dae353-74f4-4ed3-a451-47be474e1042
Panebianco, Fabrizio
88087e20-bdd3-4853-8102-cd023d954e39
Verdier, Thierry
87c483ea-f473-408f-9776-d0381cab6454
Zenou, Yves
38bf0c72-462b-4c08-8fd1-ce365b0296dc
Boucher, Vincent, Del Bello, Carlo L., Panebianco, Fabrizio, Verdier, Thierry and Zenou, Yves
(2021)
Education transmission and network formation.
Journal of Labor Economics.
Abstract
We propose a model of intergenerational transmission of education wherein children belong to either highly educated or low-educated families. Children choose the intensity of their social activities while parents decide how much educational effort to exert. Using data on adolescents in the United States, we structurally estimate this model and find that, on average, children's homophily acts as a complement to the educational effort of highly educated parents but as a substitute for the educational effort of low-educated parents.
We also perform some counterfactual policy simulations. We find that policies that subsidize kids' socialization efforts can backfire for low-educated students because they tend to increase their interactions with other low-educated students (i.e., homophily), which reduces the education effort of their parents and, thus, their chance of becoming educated. On the contrary, policies that increase heterophily by favoring friendship links between kids from different education backgrounds can be effective in reducing the education gap between
them.
Text
Cultural_transmission_19_Oct_2021
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 20 October 2021
Published date: 30 October 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452502
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452502
ISSN: 0734-306X
PURE UUID: 39fb2844-92b7-453c-833e-d6c1fec48ac2
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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:21
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:54
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Contributors
Author:
Vincent Boucher
Author:
Carlo L. Del Bello
Author:
Fabrizio Panebianco
Author:
Thierry Verdier
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