Hi Marrow, thank you for the excellent post! The decomposition approach is widely used and highly effective for breaking down and understanding the components of the total difference.
I have 2 questions out of curiosity:
1. For the 10% of Yale graduates who went directly to graduate school, how do their starting salaries compare to those of their peers who went straight into the industry? Do they tend to earn more after completing their graduate programs?
2. I came across an interesting pattern in Singapore where students of Chinese ethnicity (though they changed their nationality to Singaporean citizens from Chinese) seem more likely to pursue graduate studies than native-born Singaporean students. This trend could come from my selection bias because of my limited social connections. But, do you see a similar trend at Yale?
Hi Marrow, thank you for the excellent post! The decomposition approach is widely used and highly effective for breaking down and understanding the components of the total difference.
I have 2 questions out of curiosity:
1. For the 10% of Yale graduates who went directly to graduate school, how do their starting salaries compare to those of their peers who went straight into the industry? Do they tend to earn more after completing their graduate programs?
2. I came across an interesting pattern in Singapore where students of Chinese ethnicity (though they changed their nationality to Singaporean citizens from Chinese) seem more likely to pursue graduate studies than native-born Singaporean students. This trend could come from my selection bias because of my limited social connections. But, do you see a similar trend at Yale?
Wow maybe I am just like all the other girls
never
This is ten years of first-year-employment, correct? Could you do one year of tenth-year-employment to compare?