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Using State Child Labor Laws to Identify the Effect of School‐Year Work on High School Achievement

John H. Tyler

John Brown University

Journal of Labor Economics 2003

This article uses variation in the labor supply of twelfth‐grade students created by interstate variations in child labor laws to estimate the effect of school‐year work on twelfth‐grade math achievement. The instrumental variable estimates in this article indicate that an exogenous decrease in school‐year hours worked of 10 hours per week would result in a 0.2 standard deviation increase in math scores. Comparisons to ordinary least squares estimates suggest that failure to account for the endogeneity of the labor supply decisions of high school students will result in underestimates of the negative impact of school‐year work on academic achievement.

DOI
10.1086/345562
Volume
21 (2)
Pages
381-408
Language
en
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