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Effects of Family Background on Earnings and Returns to Schooling: Evidence from Brazil

David Lam; Robert F. Schoeni1

1 Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation

Journal of Political Economy 1993

We investigate whether omitted family background variables are responsible for high returns to schooling estimated in Brazil. Returns to schooling fall by about one-third when parental schooling is added to wage equations. Surprisingly, the schooling of fathers-in-law has larger effects on wages than the schooling of fathers. On the basis of a model of assortative mating, we interpret this as evidence that parental characteristics represent unobservable worker attributes rather than nepotism in the labor market. We conclude that the "family background bias" in returns to schooling is modest and need not imply returns to family connections.

DOI
10.1086/261894
Volume
101 (4)
Pages
710-740
Language
en
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