Elite Colleges and Upward Mobility to Top Jobs and Top Incomes

S. Zimmerman
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引用次数: 140

Abstract

This paper asks whether elite colleges help students outside of historically advantaged groups reach top positions in the economy. I combine administrative data on income and leadership teams at publicly traded firms with a regression discontinuity design based on admissions rules at elite business-focused degree programs in Chile. The 1.8 percent of college students admitted to these programs account for 41 percent of leadership positions and 39 percent of top 0.1 percent incomes. Admission raises the number of leadership positions students hold by 44 percent and their probability of attaining a top 0.1 percent income by 51 percent. However, these gains are driven by male applicants from high-tuition private high schools, with zero effects for female students or students from other school types with similar admissions test scores. Admissions effects are equal to 38 percent of the gap in rates of top attainment by gender and 54 percent of the gap by high school background for male students. A difference-in-differences analysis of the rates at which pairs of students lead the same firms suggests that peer ties formed between college classmates from similar backgrounds may play an important role in driving the observed effects. (JEL I23, I26, J16, O15)
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精英大学和通往最高工作和最高收入的向上流动
本文提出的问题是,精英大学是否能帮助历史上处于有利地位的群体之外的学生在经济领域达到最高地位。我将上市公司收入和领导团队的行政数据与基于智利精英商业学位课程招生规则的回归不连续设计结合起来。被这些项目录取的1.8%的大学生占领导职位的41%,占收入最高的0.1%的39%。被录取后,学生担任领导职位的人数增加了44%,收入达到前0.1%的可能性增加了51%。然而,这些增长主要是由来自高学费私立高中的男性申请者推动的,对女生或来自其他类型学校的学生没有任何影响,这些学生的入学考试成绩相似。在录取效果上,男女学生的最高成绩差距占38%,男生的高中背景差距占54%。一项对两对学生领导同一家公司的比率的差异分析表明,背景相似的大学同学之间形成的同伴关系可能在推动观察到的效应方面发挥了重要作用。(j23, j26, j16, j15)
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