Education, Cognition, and Health: Evidence from a Social Experiment

Working Paper: NBER ID: w19002

Authors: Costas Meghir; MÃ¥rten Palme; Emilia Simeonova

Abstract: In this paper we examine how an education policy intervention - the introduction of a comprehensive school in Sweden that increased the number of compulsory years of schooling, affected cognitive and non-cognitive skills and long-term health. We use detailed administrative data combined with survey information to create a data set with background information, child ability and long-term adult outcomes. We show that extra education results in significant gains in skills among children, but the effects on long-term health are overall negligible. However, we demonstrate that the schooling reform had heterogeneous effects across family socio-economic backgrounds and initial skill endowments, with significant improvements in cognition and skills for lower Socio-economic status individuals and lower ability people.

Keywords: Education; Cognition; Health; Social Experiment

JEL Codes: I12; I14; J48


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
education reform (I28)cognitive skills (G53)
education reform (I28)health outcomes (I14)
education reform (I28)mortality for low-ability individuals (J17)

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