Returns to Schooling in Ethiopia: The case of the Formal Sector

Authors

  • Wolday Amha East African Development and Training Consultants Author

Abstract

 The main objective of (his study is to examine and estimate the returns to schooling in one state-owned enterprise i.e. Edget Cotton Factory, and one private enterprise i.e. MOENCO. both belonging to the formal sector in Ethiopia. The naming function was employed to estimate the returns to schooling using primary and secondary sources of information. The main findings of the study are (a) human capital variables (education and experience), as estimated by the standard rate of return, at most important in influencing wages in the two enterprises; (b) the Mincerian rates of return to primary, junior secondary, senior secondary, diploma-certificate, and above diploma levels in Edget Factory are 3.3%. 5.5%, 2.8%, 18,3% and 11.3%, respectively The Mincerian regression coefficients, associated with primary education, although positive and significant, do not conform with global patterns observed by Psacharopoulos (1994) who estimated highest returns to primary education; (c) a companion of the wages of males and females in Edget Factory, showed that, for the same level of educational attainment, males had higher average wages than females. Women, though having more experience within the industry had less experience outside of the industry and occupied lower-status jobs, (e) rates of return estimated using comparative 1985 and 1998 data for Edget Factory reveal that women were paid less in 1996 compared to 1985. suggesting that their situation in the factory has deteriorated over time. But, for both males and females, a one-year increase in education increased wages from about 9% in 1985 to about 56% in 1996. 

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Published

01-12-1999

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

Returns to Schooling in Ethiopia: The case of the Formal Sector. (1999). Ethiopian Journal of Economics, 6(1), 87-104. https://ethiopianjournalofeconomics.org/index.php/EJE/article/view/314