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Great expectations. The unintended consequences of educational choices

Francesco Ferrante ()

MPRA Paper from University Library of Munich, Germany

Abstract: Human capital is invariably found to be an important explanatory variable of various proxies of well being (WB), i.e. income, happiness, job and life satisfaction, health status. Nevertheless, to date few systematic efforts have been made to explain its various and interconnected functions. The U-shaped age-SWB relation found in many empirical studies suggest that investigating the pattern of different measures of WB over people’s life cycle may reveal important information and provide useful insights about the main mechanisms connecting human capital and WB. In this paper I contend that there are four of such links. First, human capital improves the skills in decision making in different life domains. Second, it improves the skills and knowledge in doing things and enjoying life. Third, human capital shapes our identity/personality traits and, fourth, by doing so, it fuels our aspirations in different life domains. The first two effects can be expected to improve people’s performance and subjective well being. Building on Ferrante (2009), more ambiguous is the impact of human capital through the joint action of people’s identity and aspirations. In this paper, I explore data drawn from the Survey on Household Income and Wealth (SHIW) conducted by the Bank of Italy (2008), containing rich information on people’s socioeconomic and educational background, educational and skill mismatch in the workplace and various measures of WB such as income, happiness, job satisfaction and health status. The tentative explanations of my empirical findings are: (a) people experience large mismatches in aspirations/expectations early in adult life; (d) the latter mismatches depend on education and are largely confined to the labour market; (c) the curvature of the U-shaped age-happiness relationship depends on the level of education. The suggested interpretation of these results is that education affects both people’s expectations and the way they react to unfulfilled aspirations.

Keywords: Education; human capital; aspirations; mismatch; satisfaction; well being (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I21 I26 I31 J24 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-edu, nep-eur, nep-hap and nep-mfd
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Related works:
Journal Article: Great Expectations: The Unintended Consequences of Educational Choices (2017) Downloads
Working Paper: Great expectations The unintended consequences of educational choices (2014) Downloads
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