Ability, Sorting and Wage Inequality (Joint work with Pedro Carneiro)

Date:   Friday, May 05, 2006
Time:   10:30
Location:   Galton Lecture Theatre (Room 115), 1-19 Torrington Place, London WC1
Refreshments:    
Contact Name:   Federica Russo


In this paper we examine the importance of heterogeneity and self-selection into schooling for the study of inequality. Changes in inequality over time are a combination of price changes, selection bias and composition effect. To distinguish them, we estimate a semiparametric selection model for a sample of white males surveyed (during the 1990s) by the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, but our results are applicable to broader analyses of inequality. In our data, as college enrolment increases in the economy, average college wages decrease and average high school wages increase, and therefore inequality between college and high school groups decreases. Moreover, selection bias causes us to understate the growth of different measures of the average return to schooling in our sample. It also leads us to understate the increase in wage dispersion at the top of the college wage distribution, and to overstate it at the bottom of the college wage distribution.

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Speaker

Name:    Sokbae 'Simon'  Lee
Affiliation:   University College London

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