Title

Estimating Regional Returns to Education in India

Abstract

This study analyzes the effects of socio-economic factors on the real wage rates for male workers in India over the period 1983 to 2010. In particular, we examine the role of human capital by estimating the Mincerian wage equation. We construct a regional level pseudo panel data set for our analysis. Our findings show that while the return to primary education is remarkably high, the returns to other, higher, levels of education are equally remarkably low for all of India taken together, becoming progressively so as the level of education increases. These findings are in contradistinction to those of the other studies on returns to education in India, all of which, however, have relied on cross-sectional data for their analyses. We also find relatively little effects of caste, tribe and religion on real wage rates in India, suggesting that that these factors may not be as important as is sometimes believed.

Keywords

Returns to education, India, Regions, Pseudo-panel data

JEL Classification

I24, I25, O15

Inquiries

Prabir BHATTACHARYA
Research Institute for Economics and Business Administration,
Kobe University
Rokkodai-cho, Nada-ku, Kobe
657-8501 Japan
Phone: +81-78-803-7036
FAX: +81-78-803-7059
and
School of Social Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

Takahiro SATO
Research Institute for Economics and Business Administration,
Kobe University
Rokkodai-cho, Nada-ku, Kobe
657-8501 Japan
Phone: +81-78-803-7036
FAX: +81-78-803-7059