The Value of High School Graduation in the United States: Per-Person Shadow Price Estimates for Use in Cost–Benefit Analysis

Vining, Aidan R. and Weimer, David L. (2019) The Value of High School Graduation in the United States: Per-Person Shadow Price Estimates for Use in Cost–Benefit Analysis. Administrative Sciences, 9 (4). p. 81. ISSN 2076-3387

[thumbnail of admsci-09-00081.pdf] Text
admsci-09-00081.pdf - Published Version

Download (235kB)

Abstract

One way for jurisdictions with limited analytic resources to increase their capability for doing cost–benefit analysis (CBA) is to use existing shadow prices, or “plug-ins”, for important social impacts. This article contributes to the further development of one important shadow price: the value of an additional high school graduation in the United States. Specifically, how valuable to a student, government, and the rest of society in aggregate is a high school graduation? The analysis builds on the method developed by the Washington State Institute for Public Policy and presents numerical updates and extensions to their analysis. For the U.S., the estimated net present value (the social value) using a 3 percent real discount rate of this shadow price is approximately $300,000 per each additional graduate. In appropriate circumstances, this value can be “plugged-in” to CBAs of policies that either directly or indirectly seeks to increase the number of students who graduate from high school.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Archive Science > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 15 Jul 2023 06:28
Last Modified: 06 Sep 2024 09:18
URI: http://editor.pacificarchive.com/id/eprint/1405

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item