SwePub
Sök i LIBRIS databas

  Extended search

onr:"swepub:oai:DiVA.org:su-194747"
 

Search: onr:"swepub:oai:DiVA.org:su-194747" > O Brother, Where St...

  • 1 of 1
  • Previous record
  • Next record
  •    To hitlist

O Brother, Where Start Thou? Sibling Spillovers on College and Major Choice in Four Countries

Altmejd, Adam (author)
Handelshögskolan i Stockholm,Stockholms universitet,Institutet för social forskning (SOFI),Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden
Barrios-Fernández, Andrés (author)
London School of Economics and Political Science (GB)
Drlje, Marin (author)
Charles University in Prague
show more...
Goodman, Joshua (author)
Boston University (US)
Hurwitz, Michael (author)
College Board, United States
Kovac, Dejan (author)
Princeton University (US)
Mulhern, Christine (author)
RAND Corporation
Neilson, Christopher (author)
Princeton University (US)
Smith, Jonathan (author)
Georgia State University (US)
show less...
 (creator_code:org_t)
2021-03-09
2021
English.
In: Quarterly Journal of Economics. - : Oxford University Press. - 0033-5533 .- 1531-4650. ; 136:3, s. 1831-1886
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
Close  
  • Family and social networks are widely believed to influence important life decisions, but causal identification of those effects is notoriously challenging. Using data from Chile, Croatia, Sweden, and the United States, we study within-family spillovers in college and major choice across a variety of national contexts. Exploiting college-specific admissions thresholds that directly affect older but not younger siblings’ college options, we show that in all four countries a meaningful portion of younger siblings follow their older sibling to the same college or college-major combination. Older siblings are followed regardless of whether their target and counterfactual options have large, small, or even negative differences in quality. Spillover effects disappear, however, if the older sibling drops out of college, suggesting that older siblings’ college experiences matter. That siblings influence important human capital investment decisions across such varied contexts suggests that our findings are not an artifact of particular institutional detail but a more generalizable description of human behavior. Causal links between the postsecondary paths of close peers may partly explain persistent college enrollment inequalities between social groups, and this suggests that interventions to improve college access may have multiplier effects.

Subject headings

SAMHÄLLSVETENSKAP  -- Ekonomi och näringsliv -- Nationalekonomi (hsv//swe)
SOCIAL SCIENCES  -- Economics and Business -- Economics (hsv//eng)

Publication and Content Type

ref (subject category)
art (subject category)

Find in a library

To the university's database

  • 1 of 1
  • Previous record
  • Next record
  •    To hitlist

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Close

Copy and save the link in order to return to this view