Abstract

This paper provides an analysis of the rural-urban divide in intergenerational educational mobility in Indonesia with two distinguishing features. First, the estimating equations are derived from theory incorporating rural-urban differences in returns to education and school quality, and possible complementarity between parent’s education and financial investment. Second, the data are suitable for tackling the biases from sample truncation due to coresidency and omitted cognitive ability heterogeneity. The evidence rejects the workhorse linear intergenerational educational persistence equation in favor of a convex relation in rural and urban Indonesia. The rural-urban relative mobility curves cross, with the children of low educated fathers enjoying higher relative mobility in rural areas, while the pattern flips in favor of the urban children when the father has more than nine years of schooling. However, the rural children face lower absolute mobility across the whole distribution of father's schooling. Estimates from the investment equation suggest that, in urban areas, children~^!!^s peers are complementary to financial investment by parents, while the adult role models are substitutes. In contrast, separability holds in villages. Peers and role models are not responsible for the convexity in both rural and urban areas, suggesting more efficient investment by educated parents as a likely mechanism, as proposed by Becker et al. (2015, 2018). The theoretical relation between the intercepts of the mobility and investment equations helps in understand whether school quality is complementary to or a substitute for parental financial investment. This paper finds evidence of substitutability, implying that public investment to improve the quality of rural schools is desirable on both equity and efficiency grounds.

Highlights

  • Economic liberalization in the 1980s and 1990s resulted in increasing inequality in many developing countries (World Development Report 2006)

  • More important for our analysis of rural-urban divide, the pattern of rural-urban differences in the estimated coefficients we found earlier in Table 2 without any ability controls remain intact: (i) there is no significant differences in the intercepts, (ii) the linear coefficient is larger in the urban areas, and (iii) the quadratic coefficient is smaller in the urban areas

  • Using household data free of the truncation bias due to coresidency restrictions in surveys, we find that the linear conditional expectation function (CEF) widely used in the current literature is rejected in favor of a convex CEF, both in the rural and urban areas

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Summary

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The Rural-Urban Divide and Intergenerational Educational Mobility in a Developing Country: Theory and Evidence from Indonesia Md Nazmul Ahsan Saint Louis University M.

(1) Introduction
This follows from the observation that the sign of
Mean SD
Absolute Mobility
Constant Observations
Findings
Includes Ability Observations
Father Edu Role Model Edu Number of School Age Children
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