Human Capital Versus Signaling Models: University Access and High School Drop-outs

Kelly Bedard (McMaster University)

May 1998


Abstract

Under the educational sorting hypothesis, an environment in which some individuals are constrained from entering university will be characterized by increased pooling at the high school graduation level, as compared to an environment with greater university access. This results because some potential high school drop-outs and university enrollees choose the high school graduate designation in order to take advantage of high ability individuals who are constrained from entering university. This is in stark contrast to human capital theory which predicts higher university enrollment, but identical high school drop-out rates in regions with greater university access. Using NLSYM and NLSYW education data from the late 1960s and early 1970s, I find that labour markets that contain a university have higher high school drop-out rates.

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