Working Paper

The Effect of Compulsory Schooling on Health - Evidence from Biomarkers

Hendrik Jürges, Eberhard Kruk, Steffen Reinhold
CESifo, Munich, 2010

CESifo Working Paper No. 3105

Using data from the Health Survey for England and the English Longitudinal Study on Ageing, we estimate the causal effect of schooling on health. Identification comes from two nation wide increases in British compulsory school leaving age in 1947 and 1973, respectively. Our study complements earlier studies exploiting compulsory schooling laws as source of exogenous variation in schooling by using biomarkers as measures of health outcomes in addition to self-reported measures. We find a strong positive correlation between education and health, both self-rated and measured by blood fibrinogen and C-reactive protein levels. However, we find ambiguous causal effects of schooling on women's self-rated health and insignificant causal effects of schooling on men's self-rated health and biomarker levels in both sexes.

CESifo Category
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Keywords: health, compulsory schooling, biomarkers, regression discontinuity
JEL Classification: I120,I210