Volume 34, Number 2 (Spring) 1999
Neuman, Shoshana, and Adrian Ziederman. 1999. "Vocational Education in Israel: Wage Effects of the VocEd-Occupation Match." Journal of Human Resources 34(2):407-420.
In an earlier paper based on Israeli census data, the authors showed that vocational school completers achieved higher earnings than their counterparts who attended academic secondary schools, but only if they worked in occupations related to the vocational course of study pursued. These findings were challenged by Lawrence Hotchkiss; using U.S. follow-up data from the High School and Beyond survey, he argued that the wage advantage of vocational school completers working in related occupations stemmed from employment in a well-paid occupation (a possibility not examined in our earlier estimating model) and was not the result of the training received. In this paper, we replicate the U.S. study using our Israeli data base; the results strongly confirm those from our earlier study. How may the contrasting results for Israel and the United States be explained? We suggest that the U.S. study may be faulted; its focus on young workers in their first job after graduation, may have led to unduly pessimistic results with regard to the labor market outcomes of vocational schooling.
Shoshana Neuman is an associate professor of economics at Bar-Ilan University, Israel. Adrian Zider-man is a professor of economics at Bar-llan University, Israel. The authors acknowledge the very helpful comments of two anonymous referees on earlier drafts of this paper. The data used in this article can be obtained beginning August 1999 through July 2002 from the authors at the Department of Economics, Bar-llan University, 52900 Ramat Gan, Israel.
© 2002 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
US ISSN 0022-166X