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School inputs and skills: complementarity and self-productivity

Birgitta Rabe and Cheti Nicoletti

No 2013-28, ISER Working Paper Series from Institute for Social and Economic Research

Abstract: Using administrative data on schools in England, we estimate an education production model of cognitive skills at the end of secondary school. We provide empirical evidence of selfproductivity of skills and of complementarity between secondary school inputs and skills at the end of primary school. Our inference relies on idiosyncratic variation in school expenditure and child fixed effect estimation that controls for the endogeneity of past skills. The persistence in cognitive ability is 0.22 and the return to school expenditure is three times higher for students at the top of the past attainment distribution than for those at the bottom.

Date: 2013-12-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-edu, nep-eff and nep-ure
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Working Paper: School Inputs and Skills: Complementarity and Self-Productivity (2014) Downloads
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