We use micro data on manufacturing employees in Kenya and Tanzania to estimate returns to education and investigate the shape of the earnings function in the period 1993-2001. In Kenya, there have been long-run falls in the returns to education while for Tanzania there is evidence of rising returns in the 1990s. The earnings functions are convex for both countries and this result is robust to endogeneity. Convexity may be part of the explanation as to how rapid expansion of education in Africa has generated so little growth if expansion has been concentrated at lower levels of education
International audienceBased on data from the 1999–2001 Household Living Conditions Survey conducted ...
Using a series of comparable labor force surveys in urban West Africa, we estimate the private retu...
We use micro data to analyse the effect of human capital externality on earnings and private returns...
We use micro data on manufacturing employees in Kenya and Tanzania to estimate returns to education ...
This paper investigates the role of learning - through formal schooling and time spent in the labor ...
This paper investigates the role of learning- through formal schooling and time spent in the labor m...
Among Sub-Sahara Africa countries, Kenya has had a rapid educational expansion. This dissertation pr...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
Although the debate over the returns to vocational versus general education has become an important ...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
In this paper we ask what can account for the continuing strong preference for academic education in...
In this paper we ask what can account for the continuing strong preference for academic education in...
Drawing on the experiences of Kenya and Tanzania, investigates how the expansion of the educational ...
Using first-hand data from the 2009 Employment and Informal Sector Survey (EESIC) in the two largest...
International audienceBased on data from the 1999–2001 Household Living Conditions Survey conducted ...
Using a series of comparable labor force surveys in urban West Africa, we estimate the private retu...
We use micro data to analyse the effect of human capital externality on earnings and private returns...
We use micro data on manufacturing employees in Kenya and Tanzania to estimate returns to education ...
This paper investigates the role of learning - through formal schooling and time spent in the labor ...
This paper investigates the role of learning- through formal schooling and time spent in the labor m...
Among Sub-Sahara Africa countries, Kenya has had a rapid educational expansion. This dissertation pr...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
Although the debate over the returns to vocational versus general education has become an important ...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
In this paper, we use a three-period panel of Tanzanian households to explore the determinants of ea...
In this paper we ask what can account for the continuing strong preference for academic education in...
In this paper we ask what can account for the continuing strong preference for academic education in...
Drawing on the experiences of Kenya and Tanzania, investigates how the expansion of the educational ...
Using first-hand data from the 2009 Employment and Informal Sector Survey (EESIC) in the two largest...
International audienceBased on data from the 1999–2001 Household Living Conditions Survey conducted ...
Using a series of comparable labor force surveys in urban West Africa, we estimate the private retu...
We use micro data to analyse the effect of human capital externality on earnings and private returns...