Imperfect Information, Self-Selection and the Market for Higher Education

FRB of San Francisco Working Paper No. 2007-18

30 Pages Posted: 2 Nov 2007

See all articles by Tali Regev

Tali Regev

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Date Written: August 2007

Abstract

This paper explores how the steady trends in increasing tuition costs, college enrollment, and the college wage gap might be related to the quality of college graduates. The model shows that the signaling role of education might be an important yet largely neglected ingredient in these recent changes. I develop a special signaling model in which workers of heterogeneous abilities face the same costs, yet a larger proportion of able individuals self-select to attend college since they are more likely to get higher returns. With imperfect information, the skill premium is an outcome which depends on the equilibrium quality of college attendees and nonattendees. Incorporating a production function of college education, I discuss the properties of the college market equilibrium. A skill-biased technical change directly decreases self-selection into college, but the general equilibrium effect may overturn the direct decline, since increased enrollment and rising tuition costs increase self-selection. Higher initial human capital has an external effect on subsequent investment in school: All agents increase their education, and the higher equilibrium tuition costs increase self-selection and the college premium.

Keywords: Higher education, College costs

JEL Classification: J24, I21, J31

Suggested Citation

Regev, Tali, Imperfect Information, Self-Selection and the Market for Higher Education (August 2007). FRB of San Francisco Working Paper No. 2007-18, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1026387 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1026387

Tali Regev (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco ( email )

101 Market Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
United States

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