6533b836fe1ef96bd12a116c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Schooling effects and earnings of French University graduates: school quality matters, but choice of discipline matters more

Jean-françois GiretMathieu Goudard

subject

salaries wage differentialsschool choiceDemand for schoolingeducational economicshuman capitalsalaries wage differentialsDemand for schoolingeducational economics[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesschool choicehuman capital[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance

description

Our aim in this article is to study the relation between earnings of French universities graduates and some characteristics of their universities. We exploit data from the Céreq's "Génération 98" survey, enriched with information on university characteristics primarily from the ANETES (yearbook of French institutions of higher education). We employ multilevel modeling, enabling us to take advantage of the natural hierarchy in our separate datasets, and thus to identify, and even to measure potential effects of institutional quality. Since we take into account many individual students characteristics, we are able to obtain an income hierarchy among the different disciplines : students who graduated in science, economics or management obtain the highest earnings. Below them, we and students who graduated in law, political science, communication or language and literature, while the ones who graduated in social studies earn the lowest incomes. On the institutional level, we need two significant quality effects : the rest is from the socioeconomic composition of the university's student population, and the second effect is from the university's network in the job market. These last two results remain stable when we examine subsamples of universities according to their dominant teaching fields, except for universities that are particularly concentrated in science.

https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00480289/file/DTGREQAM2010-09.pdf