Correlations between Neighboring Children in Their Subsequent Educational Attainment
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in The Review of Economics and Statistics
- Vol. 82 (3) , 383-392
- https://doi.org/10.1162/003465300558885
Abstract
This study proposes using correlations between neighboring children in their later socioeconomic status to bound the proportion of inequality in socioeconomic outcomes that can be attributed to disparities in neighborhood background. We apply this approach to educational attainment data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, which has sampled neighboring children and followed them into adulthood. We find that, once the effects of a few readily observed family background characteristics are accounted for, the correlation between neighboring children in their eventual educational attainment is only about 0.1. Given that even this figure is inflated by neighbors' similarity in unmeasured aspects of family background, the results suggest a limited role for neighborhood factors in accounting for inequality in educational attainment. © 2000 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyKeywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Double trouble: on the value of twins-based estimation of the return to schoolingEconomics of Education Review, 1999
- Using Sibling Data to Estimate the Impact of Neighborhoods on Children's Educational OutcomesThe Journal of Human Resources, 1998
- Equity and Efficiency in Human Capital Investment: The Local ConnectionThe Review of Economic Studies, 1996
- A theory of persistent income inequalityJournal of Economic Growth, 1996
- Families and Neighbors as Sources of Disadvantage in the Schooling Decisions of White and Black AdolescentsAmerican Journal of Education, 1994
- Do Neighborhoods Influence Child and Adolescent Development?American Journal of Sociology, 1993
- The Association between Men's Economic Status and Their Family and Community OriginsThe Journal of Human Resources, 1992
- The Epidemic Theory of Ghettos and Neighborhood Effects on Dropping Out and Teenage ChildbearingAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1991
- A Review of Inference Procedures for the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient in the One-Way Random Effects ModelInternational Statistical Review, 1986
- Wages, Schooling and IQ of Brothers and Sisters: Do the Family Factors Differ?International Economic Review, 1986