The Effect of Infancy Radiation Exposure and Its Role as Ability Shifter in Estimating Return to Education
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33423/jsis.v16i2.4295Keywords:
strategic innovation, sustainability, instrumental variables, causal effects, environmental radiation, human capital, cognitive development, education, measurement errorAbstract
The instrumental variables (IV) model is widely used in estimating returns to education. A key, untestable, assumption for the validity of IV is the exclusion restriction. In this paper, I revisit the common schooling instrument based on local college openings to evaluate its validity and estimate heterogeneity in treatment effects. To do this, I use infant radiation exposure in the U.S. in the early 1960s as a measurable shifter that affects the latent ability term, which is assumed to be independent of the IV. Under the IV assumptions, introducing a control function for latent ability should have no effect on the estimated return to schooling. I find that controlling for infancy radiation exposure does not significantly alter the IV estimates. Second, the latent ability shifter can be used to identify heterogeneity in IV treatment effects. I show that the estimated IV treatment effect of schooling on wages decreases sharply with infancy radiation exposure.