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Working
Paper Series:
08.11
The Impact of College Graduation on Geographic Mobility:
Identifying Education Using Multiple Components of Vietnam Draft Risk
Ofer Malamud and Abigail Wozniak
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/faculty/web-pages/ofer-malamud.asp
Abstract:
College-educated workers are twice as likely as high school graduates to make lasting long-distance moves,
but little is known about the role of college itself in determining geographic mobility. Unobservable
characteristics related to selection into college might also drive the relationship between college education and
geographic mobility. We explore this question using a number of methods to analyze both the 1980 Census
and longitudinal sources. We conclude that the causal impact of college completion on subsequent mobility
is large. We introduce new instrumental variables that allow us to identify educational attainment and veteran
status separately in a sample of men whose college decisions were exogenously influenced by their draft risk
during the Vietnam War. Our preferred IV estimates imply that graduation increases the probability that a
man resides outside his birth state by approximately 35 percentage points, a magnitude nearly twice as large as
the OLS migration differential between college and high school graduates. IV estimates of graduation’s
impact on total distance moved are even larger, with IV estimates that exceed OLS considerably. We provide
evidence from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY) 1979 that our large IV estimates are
plausible and likely explained by heterogeneous treatment effects. Finally, we provide some suggestive
evidence on the mechanisms driving the relationship between college completion and mobility.
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