ABSTRACT
Parents with higher education levels have children with
higher education levels. However, is this because parental
education actually changes the outcomes of children,
suggesting an important spillover of education policies, or
is it merely that more able individuals who have higher
education also have more able children? This paper proposes
to answer this question with a unique dataset from Norway.
Using the reform of the education system that was
implemented in different municipalities at different times
in the 1960s as an instrument for parental education, we
find little evidence of a causal relationship between
parents’ education and children’s education, despite
significant OLS relationships. We find 2SLS estimates that
are consistently lower than the OLS estimates, with the only
statistically significant effect being a positive
relationship between mother's education and son's education.
These findings suggest that the high correlations between
parents’ and children’s education are due primarily to
family characteristics and inherited ability and not
education spillovers.
Key words: Intergenerational mobility,
Education, Educational reform.