We use 292 household surveys from 18 Latin American countries to document patterns in secondary school graduation rates over the period 1990-2010. We find that enrollment and graduation rates increased during that period while dropout rates decreased. We provide two types of explanations for these patterns. Countries implemented changes on the supply side to increase access, by increasing the resources allocated to education and designing policies to help students staying in school. Despite this progress, graduation rates are still generally low, there still persist remarkable gaps in educational outcomes in terms of gender, income quintiles, and regions within countries, and the quality of education is generally low.Centro de Estudios Dist...
Latin American countries have been enjoying a strong growth during the 2000s for the first time sinc...
In this paper the Argentina's secondary school drop out is studied throughtwo aspects: the estimatio...
This paper documents the evolution of wage differentials and the supply of workers by educational le...
We use 292 household surveys from 18 Latin American countries to document patterns in secondary scho...
School dropout is a growing concern in Central America, and in Latin America as a whole, because of ...
This paper discusses how young people become adults in Latin America and how that process affects ed...
This article establishes a scheme that orders the main empirical and conceptual elements about schoo...
Although participation rates in the educational system might look impressive for a Latin American co...
To access tertiary studies, to “land” a better job, to not have to go through what their parents wen...
In Latin America, the debate on heterogeneous results in education has been centered, to a greater e...
This paper shows that when student heterogeneity is introduced in the analysis, differences in the q...
The authors probe further into how household attributes affect the probability that children will wo...
The present paper introduces a new indicator of educational inequality, the grade distribution ratio...
El objetivo de este trabajo fue realizar una revisión analítica sobre las problemá...
This paper analyses the effects of grade retention on secondary school dropout by evaluating a reten...
Latin American countries have been enjoying a strong growth during the 2000s for the first time sinc...
In this paper the Argentina's secondary school drop out is studied throughtwo aspects: the estimatio...
This paper documents the evolution of wage differentials and the supply of workers by educational le...
We use 292 household surveys from 18 Latin American countries to document patterns in secondary scho...
School dropout is a growing concern in Central America, and in Latin America as a whole, because of ...
This paper discusses how young people become adults in Latin America and how that process affects ed...
This article establishes a scheme that orders the main empirical and conceptual elements about schoo...
Although participation rates in the educational system might look impressive for a Latin American co...
To access tertiary studies, to “land” a better job, to not have to go through what their parents wen...
In Latin America, the debate on heterogeneous results in education has been centered, to a greater e...
This paper shows that when student heterogeneity is introduced in the analysis, differences in the q...
The authors probe further into how household attributes affect the probability that children will wo...
The present paper introduces a new indicator of educational inequality, the grade distribution ratio...
El objetivo de este trabajo fue realizar una revisión analítica sobre las problemá...
This paper analyses the effects of grade retention on secondary school dropout by evaluating a reten...
Latin American countries have been enjoying a strong growth during the 2000s for the first time sinc...
In this paper the Argentina's secondary school drop out is studied throughtwo aspects: the estimatio...
This paper documents the evolution of wage differentials and the supply of workers by educational le...