Returns to schooling and skills in Mexico: a heterogeneous market
Fecha de publicación
2021Author
Garcia Garcia, Arely Alejandra
Formato
application/PDF
URL del recurso
http://hdl.handle.net/11651/4649Idioma
eng
Acceso
Acceso abierto
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Show full item recordAbstract
The characteristics of the Mexican labor market are changing. On the one hand, the population is increasingly educated, which means that skilled workers are less scarce. On the other hand, occupations are shifting requirements, giving greater weight to skills. The objective of this work is to estimate the returns to schooling and skills in different occupational markets. The present thesis estimates the returns to schooling and skills (cognitive and physical). For this purpose, the present work uses a model of endogenous factors with self-selection, inspired by Roy’s model to compare returns across occupations and between genders. Both schooling and skills are found to have a significant effect on wages. In addition, there is evidence that people self-select in the market that presents higher returns to the skills they posses. Results indicate that wage premiums from schooling or skills are heterogeneous between genders and occupations, which should be accounted for in future estimations on returns.
Editorial
El Autor
Derechos
Con fundamento en los artículos 21 y 27 de la Ley Federal del Derecho de Autor y como titular de los derechos moral y patrimonial, otorgo de manera gratuita y permanente al Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, A.C. y a su Biblioteca autorización para que fije la obra en cualquier medio, incluido el electrónico, y la divulguen entre sus usuarios, profesores, estudiantes o terceras personas, sin que pueda percibir por tal divulgación una contraprestación.
Grado
Licenciatura en Economía
Tipo
Tesis de licenciatura
Asesor
Dr. Jorge Omar Moreno Treviño
Cita
Garcia Garcia, Arely Alejandra. "Returns to schooling and skills in Mexico: a heterogeneous market". Tesis de licenciatura. Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11651/4649Materia
Labor market -- Effect of learning and scholarship on -- Mexico -- Statistical methods.
Wages -- Effect of learning and scholarship on -- Mexico -- Statistical methods.
Women employees -- Effect of learning and scholarship on -- Mexico -- Statistical methods.