articleAnnual Review of SociologyMar 2, 2011Closed access

Social and Economic Returns to College Education in the United States

University of California, Berkeley

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Abstract

Education correlates strongly with most important social and economic outcomes such as economic success, health, family stability, and social connections. Theories of stratification and selection created doubts about whether education actually caused good things to happen. Because schools and colleges select who continues and who does not, it was easy to imagine that education added little of substance. Evidence now tips the balance away from bias and selection and in favor of substance. Investments in education pay off for individuals in many ways. The size of the direct effect of education varies among individuals and demographic groups. Education affects individuals and groups who are less likely to pursue…

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935
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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Social stratification
  • College education
  • Higher education
  • Demographic economics
  • Economics
  • Economics education
  • Economic growth
  • Psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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