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The Big Sort: College Reputation and Labor Market Outcomes
Author(s) -
W. Bentley MacLeod,
Evan Riehl,
Juan Saavedra,
Miguel Urquiola
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
american economic journal applied economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.996
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1945-7782
pISSN - 1945-7790
DOI - 10.1257/app.20160126
Subject(s) - reputation , sort , earnings , natural experiment , business , process (computing) , set (abstract data type) , natural (archaeology) , economics , marketing , accounting , sociology , computer science , history , statistics , mathematics , archaeology , information retrieval , programming language , operating system , social science
We explore how college reputation affects the "big sort," the process by which students choose colleges and find their first jobs. We incorporate a simple definition of college reputation—graduates' mean admission scores—into a competitive labor market model. This generates a clear prediction: if employers use reputation to set wages, then the introduction of a new measure of individual skill will decrease the return to reputation. Administrative data and a natural experiment from the country of Colombia confirm this. Finally, we show that college reputation is positively correlated with graduates' earnings growth, suggesting that reputation matters beyond signaling individual skill.

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