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librarianscott | 4 years ago
The danger in both spreadsheets and in computational notebooks is you can include a lot of mathematically true and/or statistically consistent conclusions that are filled with assumptions that haven't been correlated or even agreed to by voters or policymakers.
For anyone making a bold claim like post-high-school education doesn't promote future earnings, their burden is to come up with macroeconomic examples or even models that are consistent. Just writing a book and a spreadsheet doesn't cut it, which is another way to say, they aren't making their claim in an educated way that modern economists use.
IIAOPSW|4 years ago
"Key feature of the signaling model: At the margin, signaling raises pay but not productivity, so social return<selfish (“private”) return.
Policy implication: Even selfishly lucrative education may be socially wasteful rent-seeking.
If ignoring signaling is sole flaw in existing return to education literature, true social return roughly equals mainstream social return*(1-signaling share)"
Really he's just saying something we all kind of know. Diploma's are more often than not a ticket to ride in a certain class of society, not an education technology that increases productivity. So why is there government support and subsidy for something that has private, but not much public benefit?
http://www.bcaplan.com/returns.pdf
librarianscott|4 years ago
But, if you read my earlier point, arguing these things through a book and spreadsheets is what think-tanks do, not what scientists do.