Abstract
Recent research suggests that the relative age of a student within a grade has a causal effect on educational achievement, and that this effect fades with the duration of schooling. In this study, we estimate the causal relative-age effect on track choice in Austria, a country where students are first tracked in grade 5 (at the age of 10 years), and again in grade 9. We find a strong positive relative-age effect on track choice in grades 5-8. The age effect persists beyond grade 8 for students from less-favorable socioeconomic backgrounds and students in urban areas. © The editors of The Scandinavian Journal of Economics 2014.
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Schneeweis, N., & Zweimüller, M. (2014). Early tracking and the misfortune of being young. Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 116(2), 394–428. https://doi.org/10.1111/sjoe.12046
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