Parental schooling, educational attainment, skills, and earnings: a trend analysis across 15 countries
Parental schooling, educational attainment, skills, and earnings: a trend analysis across 15 countries
Using data on 15 countries based on the harmonization of IALS and PIAC data, we provide a cross-national analysis of the evolution of the role of educational attainment and cognitive skills as mediators of intergenerational inequalities between 1994 and 2015. We find that the association between parents’ education and children’s earnings is large and highly stable over time in most countries, except for Scandinavian countries, where we detect a downward trend. Conversely, the US stands out as the country displaying the largest earning differentials by parents’ education and as the only country where these differentials increased over time. We demonstrate that educational attainment and skills contributed in different ways to the persistence of these intergenerational inequalities. On the one hand, educational equalization was compensated by increasing earning returns to education in several countries. On the other hand, the association between parents’ education and cognitive skills, as well as the related earning returns, stayed largely unchanged across these two decades.
Pensiero, Nicola
a4abb10f-51db-493d-9dcc-5259e526e96b
Barone, Carlo
57f64316-dd48-44ab-9818-e7f81c81d513
15 November 2023
Pensiero, Nicola
a4abb10f-51db-493d-9dcc-5259e526e96b
Barone, Carlo
57f64316-dd48-44ab-9818-e7f81c81d513
Pensiero, Nicola and Barone, Carlo
(2023)
Parental schooling, educational attainment, skills, and earnings: a trend analysis across 15 countries.
Social Forces, [soad144].
(doi:10.1093/sf/soad144).
Abstract
Using data on 15 countries based on the harmonization of IALS and PIAC data, we provide a cross-national analysis of the evolution of the role of educational attainment and cognitive skills as mediators of intergenerational inequalities between 1994 and 2015. We find that the association between parents’ education and children’s earnings is large and highly stable over time in most countries, except for Scandinavian countries, where we detect a downward trend. Conversely, the US stands out as the country displaying the largest earning differentials by parents’ education and as the only country where these differentials increased over time. We demonstrate that educational attainment and skills contributed in different ways to the persistence of these intergenerational inequalities. On the one hand, educational equalization was compensated by increasing earning returns to education in several countries. On the other hand, the association between parents’ education and cognitive skills, as well as the related earning returns, stayed largely unchanged across these two decades.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 October 2023
Published date: 15 November 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 480996
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480996
ISSN: 0037-7732
PURE UUID: eae5d9fc-cda4-44ce-b60a-367f1c743e16
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Date deposited: 14 Aug 2023 16:55
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:01
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Author:
Carlo Barone
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