Young, gifted and lazy? The role of ability and labor market prospects in student effort decisions
Young, gifted and lazy? The role of ability and labor market prospects in student effort decisions
This paper examines the decision-making process of students from an economic perspective to understand the determinants of an individual's willingness to provide effort. Our theoretical model predicts that ability and job market prospects are positive determinants. Analyzing a novel dataset on thousands of German students, however, we instead find that ability has a significantly negative effect on effort. It seems that the marginal gain of increasing effort in terms of higher expected income after studying is lower for high-ability students compared to low-ability students. In regard to the second determinant, the evidence rejects a similar argument, according to which great job market prospects may impair student effort. Applying an instrumental variable approach based on official unemployment data on regional labor markets, we can confirm our prediction on the positive role of perceived employment prospects in actual student behavior.
Ability, Effort, Higher education, Labor market data, Leisure, Study time
66-79
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a
de Pinto, Marco
a40b344b-3984-4069-ad0b-5b505de90afc
Schultze, Gabriel
18366934-d0b1-4059-97f0-86889a4c6024
1 October 2019
Chadi, Adrian
9b86c34e-9340-465f-a4c0-492202a0958a
de Pinto, Marco
a40b344b-3984-4069-ad0b-5b505de90afc
Schultze, Gabriel
18366934-d0b1-4059-97f0-86889a4c6024
Chadi, Adrian, de Pinto, Marco and Schultze, Gabriel
(2019)
Young, gifted and lazy? The role of ability and labor market prospects in student effort decisions.
Economics of Education Review, 72, .
(doi:10.1016/j.econedurev.2019.04.004).
Abstract
This paper examines the decision-making process of students from an economic perspective to understand the determinants of an individual's willingness to provide effort. Our theoretical model predicts that ability and job market prospects are positive determinants. Analyzing a novel dataset on thousands of German students, however, we instead find that ability has a significantly negative effect on effort. It seems that the marginal gain of increasing effort in terms of higher expected income after studying is lower for high-ability students compared to low-ability students. In regard to the second determinant, the evidence rejects a similar argument, according to which great job market prospects may impair student effort. Applying an instrumental variable approach based on official unemployment data on regional labor markets, we can confirm our prediction on the positive role of perceived employment prospects in actual student behavior.
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 April 2019
Published date: 1 October 2019
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd
Keywords:
Ability, Effort, Higher education, Labor market data, Leisure, Study time
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496176
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496176
ISSN: 0272-7757
PURE UUID: 7a23cb58-ea5a-4921-9fbc-a653be00b028
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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2024 18:00
Last modified: 07 Dec 2024 03:16
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Contributors
Author:
Adrian Chadi
Author:
Marco de Pinto
Author:
Gabriel Schultze
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