The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1
Education

0.01 points to the social return from one year of education


for one person.^10 Finally, education reduces crime. We inves-


tigate the issue of crime in Chapter 7. From those estimates


we can infer that one extra year of education for one per-


son may reduce crime enough to generate 0.14 extra point-


years of life- satisfaction for the population.^11 When spread


over say sixty years of life, this makes little difference to the


overall assessment. As educators we had hoped the case for


general educational expansion was stronger than appears to


be the case.^12


Causes of Educational Success


Finally we turn to the causes of educational success. These


have been much studied; but it is still useful to fit them into


our overall framework, using the British Cohort Study.^13


Our aim is to explain a person’s highest educational qual-


ification (measured as usual in standardized form). The re-


sults are in Table 3.5. As explanatory factors, we include all


three measures of child development at 16. Here intellec-


tual performance is measured by a simple variable reflect-


ing whether or not the person had any O- level equivalent


(grades A*– C). Not surprisingly people with this achieve-


ment at 16 reach a final level of educational qualification


nearly one standard deviation higher than other people


do. Unlike emotional health, behavior is also a significant


predictor.


Family background also matters. If your family is three


times richer, your qualifications are on average 0.2 stan-


dard deviations higher. If your father is continuously un-


employed, they are 0.3 standard deviations lower. No other

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