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High school alcohol use and young adult labor market outcomes – Russia Longitudinal Monitoring Survey of HSE

High school alcohol use and young adult labor market outcomes

Citation

Chatterji, Pinka & DeSimone, Jeffrey S. (2006). High school alcohol use and young adult labor market outcomes. NBER Working Paper No. 12529.

Abstract

We estimate the relationship between 10th grade binge drinking in 1990 and labor market outcomes in 2000 among National Educational Longitudinal Survey respondents. For females, adolescent drinking and adult wages are unrelated, and negative employment effects disappear once academic achievement is held constant. For males, negative employment effects and, more strikingly, positive wage effects persist after controlling for achievement as well as background characteristics, educational attainment, and adult binge drinking and family and job characteristics. Accounting for illegal drug use and other problem behaviors in 10th grade eliminates the unemployment effect, but strengthens the wage effect. As the latter is not explicable by the health, income or social capital justifications that are often used for frequently observed positive correlations between adult alcohol use and earnings, we conjecture that binge drinking conveys unobserved social skills that are rewarded by employers.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w12529

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2006

Journal Title

NBER Working Paper No. 12529

Author(s)

Chatterji, Pinka
DeSimone, Jeffrey S.