Essays in empirical microeconomics
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| Award date | 22-09-2016 |
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| Number of pages | 99 |
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| Abstract |
The empirical studies in this thesis investigate various factors that could affect individuals' labor market, family formation and educational outcomes. Chapter 2 focuses on scheduling as a potential determinant of individuals' productivity. Chapter 3 looks at the role of a family factor on children's long term outcomes. In particular, it examines how the gender of a sibling affects individuals’ earnings, education and family formation. Chapter 4 examines the impact of school resources on the performance of students in a Weighted Student Funding setting. Each chapter applies a different method to identify causal effects. The first study uses a lab experiment, the second study exploits a natural experiment, and the third study uses a nonparametric bound method. While the three studies use different methods, a common feature is that they all try to deal with some kind of a selection problem to get to the causal effect.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Note | Research conducted at: Universiteit van Amsterdam Series: Tinbergen Institute research series 658 |
| Language | English |
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