Technical Education, Non-cognitive Skills and Labor Market Outcomes: Experimental Evidence from Brazil

Q3 Business, Management and Accounting IZA Journal of Labor Economics Pub Date : 2018-05-01 DOI:10.2478/izajole-2021-0002
J. Camargo, L. Lima, F. Riva, A. Souza
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Abstract This paper describes the results from an evaluation of a public policy that offers scholarships to current and former public high school students, so that they can attend technical and vocational education courses free of charge. We use a waiting list randomized controlled trial in four municipalities in a southern Brazilian State (Santa Catarina) to quantify the effects of the program on school progression, labor market outcomes and non-cognitive skills. Our intention-to-treat estimates reveal substantial gender heterogeneity two years after program completion. Women experienced large gains in labor market outcomes and non-cognitive skills. Employment rose by 21 percentage points (or approximately 33%) and the gains in earnings are of more than 50%. Also, women who received the offer scored 0.5σ higher on the synthetic index of non-cognitive skills and 0.69σ higher on an extraversion indicator. We find no effects on the male sub-sample. These findings corroborate the evidence on gender heterogeneity in the labor market effects of technical and vocational education programs. We also perform a series of exercises to explore potential channels through which these effects arise.
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技术教育、非认知技能和劳动力市场结果:来自巴西的实验证据
摘要本文描述了对一项公共政策的评估结果,该政策为现任和前任公立高中学生提供奖学金,使他们能够免费参加技术和职业教育课程。我们在巴西南部一个州(圣卡塔琳娜州)的四个市镇进行了一项等待名单随机对照试验,以量化该计划对学校进步、劳动力市场结果和非认知技能的影响。我们的意向治疗估计显示,在项目完成两年后,性别差异很大。妇女在劳动力市场成果和非认知技能方面取得了巨大进步。就业增长了21个百分点(约33%),收入增长超过50%。此外,接受录取的女性在非认知技能综合指数上的得分高出0.5σ,在外向性指标上的得分则高出0.69σ。我们没有发现对男性子样本的影响。这些发现证实了技术和职业教育项目对劳动力市场影响的性别异质性的证据。我们还进行了一系列练习,以探索产生这些影响的潜在渠道。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
IZA Journal of Labor Economics
IZA Journal of Labor Economics Business, Management and Accounting-Industrial Relations
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: As of March 31, 2019, the IZA Open Access Journal Series will transfer to Sciendo. Please use the Springer Editorial Manager system for all submissions until February 28. During the transfer period in March 2019 you may direct your submissions to journals@iza.org. The IZA Journal of Labor Economics publishes scientific articles in all areas of labor economics. This refers to original high-quality theoretical and applied contributions on both microeconomic and macroeconomic labor-related topics. In particular, the IZA Journal of Labor Economics encourages submissions in subject areas that are closely linked to the various IZA Program Areas, ranging from education, family and environment to mobility, behavioral and personnel economics, and labor market institutions, among others. The IZA Journal of Labor Economics is part of IZA’s mission of contributing to social and economic discourse, enabling political decision-making to be based on the best available scientific knowledge. We want to stimulate research to close knowledge gaps. Hence, the IZA Journal of Labor Economics particularly welcomes contributions that provide scientifically sound answers to open and relevant questions of modern labor economics.
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