Attention Economy


Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Excess Supply of College Graduates - Evidence from China

Does Higher Education Guarantee Higher Pay? Not For All
https://shanghai.nyu.edu/news/does-higher-education-guarantee-higher-pay-not-all
 
Heterogeneity, selection, and the policy effect of educational expansion on college graduate earnings in China, 1981–2015
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rssm.2024.100912
Abstract
This article examines the impact of social origin on the returns to college education in the context of China’s higher education expansion since 1999. Utilizing a double-treatment setting, a marginal treatment effect framework is adopted to estimate the causal effect of college education on earnings, while a difference-in-differences methodology identifies the policy effect of educational expansion on the college premium. Analysis of data from a series of nationally representative Chinese surveys reveals that the “true” college earnings premium is rather small for the post-expansion cohort, and that much of the observed earnings gap between college and high school graduates after the expansion is due to returns to unobserved abilities. Further analysis shows that the college earnings premium after the expansion declines more for rural-origin children with schooling probabilities in the top percentiles than for their urban counterparts.