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Access to Elite Education, Wage Premium and Social Mobility: The Truth and Illusion of China's College Entrance Exam
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Jia, Ruixue
Abstract
Professor Ruixue Jia, Assistant Professor of Economics, School of Global Policy & Strategy, UC San Diego.
This talk examines the returns to elite education and their implications on elite formation and social mobility, exploiting an open elite education recruitment system -- China's College Entrance Exam. We conduct annual national surveys of around 40,000 college graduates during 2010-2015 to collect their performance at the entrance exam, job outcomes, and other individual characteristics. Exploiting a discontinuity in the probability of attending elite universities around the cutoff scores, we find a sizable wage premium of elite education. However, access to elite education does not promise one's entry into the elite class (measured by occupation, industry and other non-wage benefits) but parents' elite status does. Access to elite education also does not alter the intergenerational link between parents' status and children's status. The wage premium appears more consistent with the signaling mechanism of elite education than the role of human capital or social networks.
Description
Video of full lecture with presentation slides edited into the video.
Sponsorship
Cornell East Asia Program, Cornell Institute for China Economic Research.
Date Issued
2016-10-31Publisher
East Asia Program, Cornell University
Subject
East Asia; China; Education; Social Mobility; State policy
Related Version
https://vimeo.com/192153439
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Type
video/moving image
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captions
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Closed captions available
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International