Title: Exam Results
1Exam Results
- ADD 12 to the score on the exam.
- Mean80 (after 12 added)
- A 95 and higher (6)
- A- 90 to 95 (8)
- B 87 to 89 (11)
- B 83 to 86 (12)
- B- 80 to 82 (6)
- C 77 to 79.5 (10)
- C 73 to 76 (11)
- C- 70 to 72 (8)
- D 60 to 69 (9)
- F under 60 (4)
2Explanations for Poverty
- Today we will
- Begin examining explanations for poverty and
economic stratification more broadly - Individual explanations
- Continue into Thursdays class
- Structural explanations
- How individual and structural explanations
combine to create local variation - Throughout
- Challenge stereotypes of the poor
- Explore nonmetro and metro differences
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4Look at poverty across residence and by age and
race/ethnicity
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6Poverty rate ( persons) by place of residence,
2001
From Jensen, McLaughlin and Slack 2003
7Poverty rates () by age and residence, 2001
Child poverty
8Age distribution of the poor, 2001
Poor Children
Nonmetro
Metro
9Poverty rates () by race/ethnicity and
residence, 2001
10Race/ethnic distribution of the poor
Nonmetro
Metro
11Percentage of Children in Poverty by Race/
Ethnicity, 2000
12Poverty rates () by marital status and
residence, 2001
13Percentage of Children in Poverty by Family Type
and Residence, 2000
14How do we explain these substantial differences
in poverty across groups?
15What causes poverty (economic stratification)?
- Focus today on Individual-level explanations
- Differences in human capital investments
16Theoretical perspectives on human capital
- Human capital theoryeconomic perspective
- Status attainment theorysociological perspective
- Community influences on educational and
occupational attainmentcommunity social capital
17Human Capital Theory
- Workers can enhance future earnings by foregoing
current earnings to increase their labor skills
by investing time/ resources in - Formal schooling
- On-the-job training (broad, firm-specific)
- Willingness to migrate
18Human capital investments ultimately determine
work, earnings poverty
A
Human capital investments
B
Human capital stock
C
Level of productivity
Earnings
D
Poor
Not Poor
- From Beaulieu and Mulkey chapter, 1995.
19Three critiques of human capital theory
- Inattention to why some people are better able
than others to invest in their human capital - Simplistic linkage between investments in human
capital and work-related earnings - Failure to adequately explain why human capital
linkage to earnings varies across race/ethnic
groups, gender, residence
20Status attainment theorywhy are some better able
to invest in human capital
- Family background (SES) influences success in
school and occupational aspirations and choices - Socialization to place high value on education
- Families provide
- Financial capital
- Human capital
- Social capital
Vary across families
21In addition to family, community can influence
human capital investments
- Local occupational opportunities
- Community norms, social networks
- Adult supervision/ interactions with children,
mentoring - Community-sponsored programs for youth
- Thus, we see differences in human capital
investment across local communities and across
metro and nonmetro areas
22What do we know about human capital investment?
- Most common measure is educational attainment
- Human capital investments vary greatly by
race/ethnicity and residence - More difficult to measure job skills, worker
productivity
23What has happened to education (educational
attainment, test scores)?
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27Educational Attainment figures
28Human capital also is based on knowledge attained
during education and training
- Some argue rural schools do a poorer job of
preparing students, explaining lower productivity
(and earnings) of rural workers - Do metro and nonmetro youth differ in achievement
test scores?
29Mean achievement scores of twelfth graders (from
Teixeira)
30How does educational attainment relate to poverty?
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32Migration and human capital
- A major factor influencing the educational
attainment across counties or places is migration - Migration is selectivepeople with higher levels
of education are more likely to migrate (cross
county boundaries) - How does this selective migration affect
educational attainment in nonmetro and metro areas
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34Human capital as a local resource
- Communities also value human capital
- Local volunteers
- Workforce that attracts new employers offering
good jobs - More capacity in local governance
35The rural workforce, human capital and economic
development
- Classic argument in rural development is whether
job quality disadvantages or lower human capital
are responsible for lower earnings and high
poverty in rural areas - And what is the relationship between job quality
and human capital? (Which comes first? What
should a local community concentrate on?)
36One scholars (Teixeira) argument
- Human capital in rural areas is adequate to meet
the skills demanded by employers - Economic development question is how do we
upgrade the types of jobs offered in rural areas
to encourage better-educated and skilled people
to stay or move in? - What is the industrial and occupational structure
in rural areas? How different is it from that in
metro areas?
37Next class---we answer that last question and
focus on demand side of rewards to human capital
- The Rural Economyhow different is it?
- Readings
- Chapter 9 in FloraThe Global Economy
- Brown and Swanson, Chapter 10 (on course web
site) - Optional Schaefer, Ch. 14 pp. 340-344 and
352-356.