Affiliation:
1. University of California, Berkeley (email: )
2. University of California, Santa Barbara (email: )
Abstract
We investigate the wage return to studying economics by leveraging a policy that prevented students with low introductory grades from declaring a major. Students who barely met the grade point average threshold to major in economics earned $22,000 (46 percent) higher annual early-career wages than they would have with their second-choice majors. Access to the economics major shifts students' preferences toward business/finance careers, and about half of the wage return is explained by economics majors working in higher-paying industries. The causal return to majoring in economics is very similar to observational earnings differences in nationally representative data. (JEL A22, I26, J24, J31)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
24 articles.
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