Title
Do Marital Status and Computer Usage Really Change the Wage Structure? Evidence from a Sample of Twins
Author(s)
Harry A. Krashinsky Harry Krashinsky (Princeton University)
Abstract
Both marital status and computer usage on the job have been found to increase earnings by as much as two additional years of schooling. If correct, these findings suggest that factors other than long-term human capital investments are key determinants of earnings. Data on identical twins are used in this paper to sweep out selection effects and examine the effect of marital status and computer usage on wages. Within-twin estimates indicate that, unlike education, job tenure and union status, neither marital status nor computer usage have a large or significant effect on wages.
Creation Date
2000-06
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
439
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01w9505046q/1/439.pdf
File Function
Jel
O30, O31
Keyword(s)
marriage, computer, wages, measurement error
Suppress
false
Series
1