Monday, 10 October, 2016

16:30 | Applied Micro Research Seminar

Silvia Barcellos, Ph.D. (USC Dornsife): “Heterogeneous Effects of Education on Health”

Silvia Barcellos, Ph.D.

Center for Economic and Social Research (CESR) at the University of Southern California (USC) Dornsife, Los Angeles, USA


Authors: Silvia H. Barcellos, Leandro Carvalho, and Patrick Turley

Abstract: In 1972, the mandatory minimum age at which a student could drop out of school in England and Wales was raised from 15 to 16, constraining roughly 15 percent of the student population. We exploit this discontinuous increase in educational attainment to estimatethe impact of education on body mass index (BMI) and diabetes approximately 40 years later. While previous literature found no significant effect of education on health, they were not able to investigate whether these effects vary along the distribution of health outcomes. We are able to detect large effects on BMI in the upper quantiles of observed BMI, as large as 2 BMI points at the 90th percentile of BMI, from a baseline of 35.6. Using a genetic predictor of BMI, we also find that those with higher genetic risk of obesity see smaller reductions in BMI as a result of the increase in compulsory schooling while large reductions are seen in those with low genetic risk.  Taken together our results point to the importance of considering heterogeneity when estimatingthe impacts of education on health.


Full Text:  “Heterogeneous Effects of Education on Health”