Skill Substitution, Expectations, and the Business Cycle
Research output: Preprint/Documentation/Report › Preprint
Contributors
Abstract
This paper studies how labor market conditions around high school graduation affect postsecondary skill investments. Using administrative data on more than six million German graduates from 1995-2018, and exploiting deviations from secular state-specific trends, I document procyclical college enrollment. Cyclical increases in unemployment reduce enrollment at traditional universities and shift graduates toward vocational colleges and apprenticeships. These effects translate into educational attainment. Using large-scale survey data, I identify changes in expected returns to different degrees as the main mechanism. During recessions, graduates expect lower returns to an academic degree, while expected returns to a vocational degree are stable.
Details
| Original language | English |
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| Number of pages | 48 |
| Publication status | Published - 2 Feb 2026 |
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External IDs
| ORCID | /0000-0003-4378-0847/work/207310017 |
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Keywords
Keywords
- econ.GN