Parental beliefs about returns to educational investments—the later the better?
In this paper, we study parental beliefs about the returns to parental investments made during different periods of childhood. Using two independent samples, we document that parents perceive the returns to different late investments to be higher than the returns to early investments, and that they...
Autors principals: | Boneva, T, Rauh, C |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Idioma: | English |
Publicat: |
Oxford University Press
2018
|
Ítems similars
-
What drives enrolment gaps in further education? the role of beliefs in sequential schooling decisions
per: Belfield, C, et al.
Publicat: (2019) -
Perceived returns to job search
per: Adams-Prassl, A, et al.
Publicat: (2022) -
Shifting parental beliefs about child development to foster parental investments and improve school readiness outcomes
per: John A. List, et al.
Publicat: (2021-10-01) -
Expectations investing : reading stock prices for better returns /
per: 222075 Rappaport, Alfred, et al.
Publicat: (2001) -
Increasing our return on investment in science: Start with better behavior
per: David Moher
Publicat: (2023-05-01)