This paper examines how assortative matching affects graduate earnings through the choice of attending university. We build up a model where individuals decide whether to attend university for increasing both their future income and the probability to marry an educated partner. The theoretical results suggest that, as assortative matching increases, the number of graduates increases and their earnings fall. The test using the British Household Panel Survey for years 1991-2006 supports the theoretical findings
The first chapter proposes a theory on how students’ social background affects school teaching and j...
Some economists have argued that assortative mating between men and women has increased over the las...
We investigate assortative mating on education using a sample of couples from the Health and Retirem...
This paper examines how the decision to acquire higher education may affect job and marital satisfac...
This paper argues that assortative matching may explain over-education. Education determines individ...
This paper examines how educational decisions affect job and marital satisfaction. We build up a mod...
The extent to which like-with like marry is important for inequality as well as for the outcomes of ...
The extent to which like-with like marry is particularly important for inequality as well as for the...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
There is a growing concern internationally about levels of income inequality, and the negative effec...
This paper investigates an unanticipated consequence of rising income inequality, namely changes in ...
Educational assortative matching among couples, i.e. the phenomenon whereby the higheducated have pa...
While current literature on marital sorting focuses either on the role of schooling or on the role o...
While men have always received more education than women in the past, this gender imbalance in educa...
The first chapter proposes a theory on how students’ social background affects school teaching and j...
Some economists have argued that assortative mating between men and women has increased over the las...
We investigate assortative mating on education using a sample of couples from the Health and Retirem...
This paper examines how the decision to acquire higher education may affect job and marital satisfac...
This paper argues that assortative matching may explain over-education. Education determines individ...
This paper examines how educational decisions affect job and marital satisfaction. We build up a mod...
The extent to which like-with like marry is important for inequality as well as for the outcomes of ...
The extent to which like-with like marry is particularly important for inequality as well as for the...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
This paper attempts to explain the decrease and reversal of the education gap between males and fema...
There is a growing concern internationally about levels of income inequality, and the negative effec...
This paper investigates an unanticipated consequence of rising income inequality, namely changes in ...
Educational assortative matching among couples, i.e. the phenomenon whereby the higheducated have pa...
While current literature on marital sorting focuses either on the role of schooling or on the role o...
While men have always received more education than women in the past, this gender imbalance in educa...
The first chapter proposes a theory on how students’ social background affects school teaching and j...
Some economists have argued that assortative mating between men and women has increased over the las...
We investigate assortative mating on education using a sample of couples from the Health and Retirem...