Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis

The achievement of females relative to males in the Jamaican educational system is analysed from both an institutional and market perspective. It is found that the evidence available is consistent with the view that both pecuniary and non-pecuniary incentives reinforce each other to produce the distinctive pattern of female performance in Jamaica. It is likely that gender differences in socialization within the household better prepare girls for the skills required to succeed in the Jamaican schooling system. In addition, education is often seen as being more important for a girl’s future success than for a boy’s. In the framework of human capital theory, both these institutional features translate into higher marginal benefit (or demand) curves for girls than for boys, which would suggest both greater investment in schooling for girls and higher equilibrium returns on these investments. The empirical evidence is consistent with the inference: Jamaican women have both more education and higher returns to this education than their male counterparts do.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Figueroa, Mark, Handa, Sudhanshu
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1998
Subjects:Academic achievement,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/55880
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-558802023-08-05T06:56:59Z Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis Figueroa, Mark Handa, Sudhanshu Academic achievement The achievement of females relative to males in the Jamaican educational system is analysed from both an institutional and market perspective. It is found that the evidence available is consistent with the view that both pecuniary and non-pecuniary incentives reinforce each other to produce the distinctive pattern of female performance in Jamaica. It is likely that gender differences in socialization within the household better prepare girls for the skills required to succeed in the Jamaican schooling system. In addition, education is often seen as being more important for a girl’s future success than for a boy’s. In the framework of human capital theory, both these institutional features translate into higher marginal benefit (or demand) curves for girls than for boys, which would suggest both greater investment in schooling for girls and higher equilibrium returns on these investments. The empirical evidence is consistent with the inference: Jamaican women have both more education and higher returns to this education than their male counterparts do. 2023-08-04T14:34:13Z 2023-08-04T14:34:13Z 1998 Text CERIS - 535:01 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/55880 en image/jpeg
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
topic Academic achievement
Academic achievement
spellingShingle Academic achievement
Academic achievement
Figueroa, Mark
Handa, Sudhanshu
Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
description The achievement of females relative to males in the Jamaican educational system is analysed from both an institutional and market perspective. It is found that the evidence available is consistent with the view that both pecuniary and non-pecuniary incentives reinforce each other to produce the distinctive pattern of female performance in Jamaica. It is likely that gender differences in socialization within the household better prepare girls for the skills required to succeed in the Jamaican schooling system. In addition, education is often seen as being more important for a girl’s future success than for a boy’s. In the framework of human capital theory, both these institutional features translate into higher marginal benefit (or demand) curves for girls than for boys, which would suggest both greater investment in schooling for girls and higher equilibrium returns on these investments. The empirical evidence is consistent with the inference: Jamaican women have both more education and higher returns to this education than their male counterparts do.
format Texto
topic_facet Academic achievement
author Figueroa, Mark
Handa, Sudhanshu
author_facet Figueroa, Mark
Handa, Sudhanshu
author_sort Figueroa, Mark
title Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
title_short Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
title_full Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
title_fullStr Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
title_full_unstemmed Female schooling achievement in Jamaica: A market and non-market analysis
title_sort female schooling achievement in jamaica: a market and non-market analysis
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/55880
work_keys_str_mv AT figueroamark femaleschoolingachievementinjamaicaamarketandnonmarketanalysis
AT handasudhanshu femaleschoolingachievementinjamaicaamarketandnonmarketanalysis
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