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The Economic Value of Breaking Bad: Misbehavior, Schooling and the Labor Market

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  • Nicholas W. Papageorge
  • Victor Ronda
  • Yu Zheng

Abstract

Prevailing research argues that childhood misbehavior in the classroom is bad for schooling and, presumably, bad overall. We examine lifecycle impacts of a widely studied socio-emotional skill, externalizing behavior, which captures childhood misbehavior in school and is linked to aggression, hyperactivity and lower educational attainment. Externalizing behavior has been the focus of hundreds of papers across several fields and its negative impact on educational attainment has justified multitudes of policies to address or discourage it. Aligned with prior work, we find that externalizing behavior lowers educational attainment for males. However, we also provide novel evidence that it increases earnings for males and females. The earnings premium holds across genders and occupations, is replicated in several data sets and is robust to alternative modeling assumptions. That a skill can be both helpful and harmful raises concerns about policies surrounding skill acquisition, especially if the skill has opposite effects across crucial or largely unavoidable phases of the lifecycle, such as schooling and work. For example, well-meaning policies to improve schooling can have negative repercussions over the lifecycle. More broadly, our results illustrate the need to measure skill prices across contexts and challenge the widespread, implicit and largely untested assumption that the same skills that are valuable in childhood are also valuable in adulthood.

Suggested Citation

  • Nicholas W. Papageorge & Victor Ronda & Yu Zheng, 2019. "The Economic Value of Breaking Bad: Misbehavior, Schooling and the Labor Market," NBER Working Papers 25602, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  • Handle: RePEc:nbr:nberwo:25602
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    Cited by:

    1. Li, Liming & Avendano, Mauricio, 2023. "Lone parents' employment policy and adolescents’ socioemotional development: Quasi-experimental evidence from a UK reform," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 320(C).
    2. French, Eric Baird & O’Dea, Cormac & MacCuish, Jamie, 2021. "The Intergenerational Elasticity of Earnings: Exploring the Mechanisms," CEPR Discussion Papers 15975, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers.
    3. Victor Ronda & Esben Agerbo & Dorthe Bleses & Preben Bo Mortensen & Anders Børglum & Ole Mors & Michael Rosholm & David M. Hougaard & Merete Nordentoft & Thomas Werge, 2022. "Family disadvantage, gender, and the returns to genetic human capital," Scandinavian Journal of Economics, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 124(2), pages 550-578, April.
    4. Nicholas W Papageorge & Kevin Thom, 2020. "Genes, Education, and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study," Journal of the European Economic Association, European Economic Association, vol. 18(3), pages 1351-1399.
    5. Ferman, Bruno & Fontes, Luiz Felipe, 2020. "Discriminating Behavior: Evidence from teachers’ grading bias," MPRA Paper 100400, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    6. Hélène Le Forner, 2021. "Formation of Children’s Cognitive and Socio-Emotional Skills: Is All Parental Time Equal?," AMSE Working Papers 2117, Aix-Marseille School of Economics, France.
    7. Nicola Barban & Elisabetta De Cao & Marco Francesconi, 2021. "Gene-Environment Effects on Female Fertility," CESifo Working Paper Series 9337, CESifo.
    8. Shelly Lundberg, 2020. "Educational gender gaps," Southern Economic Journal, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 87(2), pages 416-439, October.
    9. Del Bono, Emilia & Etheridge, Ben & Garcia, Paul, 2024. "The economic value of childhood socio-emotional skills," ISER Working Paper Series 2024-01, Institute for Social and Economic Research.
    10. Alaoui, Larbi & Fons-Rosen, Christian, 2021. "Know when to fold’em: The flip side of grit," European Economic Review, Elsevier, vol. 136(C).
    11. Orazio Attanasio & Sarah Cattan & Costas Meghir, 2021. "Early Childhood Development, Human Capital and Poverty," NBER Working Papers 29362, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    12. Shelly Lundberg, 2017. "Noncognitive Skills as Human Capital," NBER Chapters, in: Education, Skills, and Technical Change: Implications for Future US GDP Growth, pages 219-243, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    13. Turner, Alex J. & Fichera, Eleonora & Sutton, Matt, 2022. "Estimating the late-life effects of social and emotional skills in childhood using midlife mediators," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 292(C).
    14. Mari, Gabriele & Keizer, Renske, 2020. "Parental job loss and early child development in the Great Recession," SocArXiv 2596e, Center for Open Science.

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    More about this item

    JEL classification:

    • I20 - Health, Education, and Welfare - - Education - - - General
    • J10 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demographic Economics - - - General
    • J20 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demand and Supply of Labor - - - General

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