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Student Employment and Education: A Meta-Analysis

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Author
Kroupova, Katerina
Havránek, TomášORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-3158-2539WoS Profile - M-8888-2015Scopus Profile - 24453189000
Iršová, ZuzanaORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-0753-8124WoS Profile - K-6387-2016Scopus Profile - 37080793200
Publication date
2024
Published in
Economics of Education Review
Volume / Issue
100 (June 2024)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 0272-7757
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1873-7382
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  • Faculty of Social Sciences

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1016/j.econedurev.2024.102539

Abstract
Educational outcomes have many determinants, but one that most young people can readily control is choosing whether to work while in school. Sixty-nine studies have estimated the effect, but results vary from large negative to positive estimates. We show that the results are systematically driven by context, publication bias, and treatment of endogeneity. Studies neglecting endogeneity suffer from an upward bias, which is almost fully compensated by publication selection in favor of negative estimates. Overall the literature suggests a negative but economically inconsequential mean effect. The effect is more substantive for decisions to drop out. To derive these results we collect 861 previously reported estimates together with 32 variables reflecting estimation context, use recently developed techniques to correct for publication bias, and employ Bayesian model averaging to assign a pattern to the heterogeneity in the literature.
Keywords
Student employment, Educational outcomes, Meta-analysis, Publication bias, Bayesian model averaging,
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2701
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WOS:001229705800001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85190351619
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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