the increasing penalty for not going to college | SP
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the increasing penalty for not going to college
Sociologists and economists have long written about the college-non college wage gap. People who attended college, and especially college graduates, tend to make more money than those who did not. The way this gap is usually discussed is in terms of the “returns to a college degree” or the “college premium.” For example, Hout’s (2012) […]
https://scatter.wordpress.com/2015/04/24/the-increasing-penalty-for-not-going-to-college/ -
Impressive that you've found a way to make sociology even more depressing!
On a serious note, isn't most of the college/non-college wage gap due to selection effects rather than causal factors as the "bonus/penalty" language implies? In other words, calling it a penalty still implies that the gap is about the choice to go to college, rather than a "structured fact about unequal educational access."
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I didn't read the post. But I find it interested that in econ this is a "college premium" or reflective of "skill-biased technological change" whereas in soc we apparently now frame it as a "penalty for not going to college." I mean I get that we're a field that often defines itself around social problems but that's quite a linguistic pretzel to get there.
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