Abstract
This paper documents the evolution of wage differentials and the supply of workers by educational level for sixteen Latin American countries over the period 1991–2013. We find a pattern of rather constant rise in the relative supply of skilled and semi-skilled workers over the period. Whereas the returns to secondary education fell over time, in contrast, the returns to tertiary education display a remarkable changing pattern common to almost all economies: significant increase in the 1990s, strong fall in the 2000s, and a deceleration of that fall in the 2010s. We conclude that supply-side factors seem to have limited explanatory power relative to demand-side factors in accounting for changes in the wage gap between workers with tertiary education and the rest.
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Acosta, P., Cruces, G., Galiani, S., & Gasparini, L. (2019). Educational upgrading and returns to skills in Latin America: evidence from a supply–demand framework. Latin American Economic Review, 28(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40503-019-0080-6
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