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Cognitive skills are more relevant in explaining earnings,
socio-emotional skills in determining labor supply and schooling
Common proxies, such as years of education, have been shown to
be ineffective at capturing cross-country differences in skills acquisition, as well as the
role they play in the labor market. A large body of research shows that direct measures of
skills, in particular cognitive and socio-emotional ones, provide more adequate estimations of
individuals’ differences in potential productive capacity than the quantity of education they
receive. Evidence shows that cognitive skills in particular are quite relevant to explain
wages, while socio-emotional skills are more associated with labor force and education
participation decisions.
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Policies to tackle wage inequality should focus
on skills alongside reform of labor market institutions
Policymakers in many OECD countries are
increasingly concerned about high and rising inequality. Much of the
evidence (as far back as Adam Smith’s The Wealth of
Nations) points to the importance of skills in tackling wage
inequality. Yet a recent strand of the research argues that (cognitive)
skills explain little of the cross-country differences in wage inequality.
Does this challenge the received wisdom on the relationship between skills
and wage inequality? No, because this recent research fails to account for
the fact that the price of skill (and thus wage inequality) is determined to
a large extent by the match of skill supply and demand.
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Better understanding of skills mismatch is essential to finding effective policy options
Evidence suggests that productivity would be much higher and unemployment much lower if the supply of and demand for skills were better matched. As a result, skills mismatch between workers (supply) and jobs (demand) commands the ongoing attention of policymakers in many countries. Policies intended to address the persistence of skills mismatch focus on the supply side of the issue by emphasizing worker education and training. However, the role of the demand side, that is, employers’ rigid skill requirements, garners comparatively little policy attention.
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Basic skills in literacy and numeracy are
essential for success in the labor market
Even in OECD countries, where an increasing
proportion of the workforce has a university degree, the value of basic
skills in literacy and numeracy remains high. Indeed, in some countries the
return for such skills, in the form of higher wages, is sufficiently large
to suggest that they are in high demand and that there is a relative
scarcity. Policymakers need robust evidence in order to devise interventions
that genuinely improve basic skills, not just of new school leavers entering
the market, but also of the existing workforce. This would lead to
significant improvements in the population that achieves a minimum level of
literacy and numeracy.
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It is vital to measure language proficiency
well, as it crucially determines immigrants’ earnings
Over recent decades, Western countries have
admitted many immigrants from non-traditional regions (e.g. Philippines,
India, China), which has coincided with poor economic integration. Language
proficiency is an important determinant of economic integration; in addition
to being a component of human capital, it plays a key role in facilitating
the transmission of other components of human capital. Examining the
strengths and weaknesses of objective and subjective measures of language
proficiency is crucial for good integration policy, as is understanding the
relationship between these measures and earnings, a key indicator of
economic integration.
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Better educated parents invest more time and
money in their children, who are more successful in the labor market
Governments invest a lot of money in education,
so it is important to understand the benefits of this spending. One
essential aspect is that education can potentially make people better
parents and thus improve the educational and employment outcomes of their
children. Interventions that encourage the educational attainment of
children from poorer families will reduce inequality in current and future
generations. In addition to purely formal education, much less expensive
interventions to improve parenting skills, such as parental involvement
programs in schools, may also improve child development.
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It depends: older children perform better on
standardized tests, but evidence of older school starting ages on long-term
outcomes is mixed
There is a widely held belief that older
students, by virtue of being more mature and readier to learn at school
entry, may have better academic, employment, and earnings outcomes compared
to their younger counterparts. There are understated, albeit important,
costs to starting school later, however. Compulsory school-attendance laws
may allow these same older pupils to drop out of high school earlier, which
could adversely impact their employment; entering the workforce later also
has implications for lifetime earnings and remittances to governments.
Overall, research suggests that school-age entry policies can improve
student achievement in the short term, but the long-term impacts are
currently not well-understood.
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Increased stakes in educational achievement
explain why today’s anxious parents engage in intensive parenting styles
Parents now engage in much more intensive
parenting styles compared to a few decades ago. Today’s parents supervise
their children more closely, spend more time interacting with them, help
much more with homework, and place more emphasis on educational achievement.
More intensive parenting has also led to more unequal parenting: highly
educated parents with high incomes have increased their parenting
investments the most, leading to a growing “parenting gap” in society. These
trends can contribute to declining social mobility and further exacerbate
rising inequality, which raises the question of how policymakers should
respond.
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