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search results for `Women in Economics` |u:ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk
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Do returns to education matter to schooling participation?
https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/publications/GK_returns_to_ed.pdf19 May 2010: Evidence from India. 1. Introduction. Much work in education economics focuses on explaining the educational decisions of. ... and community factors. Economics of Education Review, 21(5):455–470. Tansel, A. (1994) “Wage Employment, Earnings and -
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https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/publications/MAslam_EdGenderGapsPak.pdf16 Feb 2010: women’s or if itmore generally discriminates between the two genders, parents may have anincentive to invest more in boys’ education. ... As with simple OLS, the return toeducation for women is more than double that for men in Pakistan. -
© 2010 Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty …
https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/publications/WP33-HEd_Econ_Dev_in_Afr_final.pdf6 Oct 2010: Prichett (2001, 2006) draws attention to the fact that while the micro relationship between earnings and education is one of the most robust empirical relationships in economics the same is not ... rates. The earnings function is probably the most -
Chapter One: Educational Participation in Kenya
https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/publications/WP25-CC.pdf11 Feb 2010: This. is much higher than in public universities, where women constitute just about one-third of. ... concentration in courses like secretarial studies, home economics, textile design and related. -
© 2010 Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty …
https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/researchprogrammes/recoup/publications/workingpapers/WP33-HEd_Econ_Dev_in_Afr_final.pdf6 Oct 2010: Prichett (2001, 2006) draws attention to the fact that while the micro relationship between earnings and education is one of the most robust empirical relationships in economics the same is not ... rates. The earnings function is probably the most -
Chapter One: Educational Participation in Kenya
https://ceid.educ.cam.ac.uk/researchprogrammes/recoup/publications/workingpapers/WP25_WO_CC1-final1.pdf14 Oct 2010: This is much. higher than in public universities, where women constitute just about one-third of total enrolments. ... However, underlying this ostensibly better enrolment for women is their concentration in courses like.
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