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Title: The Roles of High School Completion and GED Receipt in Smoking and Obesity
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Kenkel, Donald S.
Lillard, Dean R.
Mathios, Alan D.
The Roles of High School Completion and GED Receipt in Smoking and Obesity
Journal of Labor Economics 24,3 (July 2006): 635-660.
Also: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/504277
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Keyword(s): GED/General Educational Diploma/General Equivalency Degree/General Educational Development; High School; High School Completion/Graduates; Obesity; Schooling; Smoking (see Cigarette Use)

We analyze data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 on high school completion, smoking, and obesity. First, we investigate whether GED recipients differ from other high school graduates in their smoking and obesity behaviors. Second, we explore whether the relationships between schooling and these health-related behaviors are sensitive to controlling for background and ability measures. Third, we estimate instrumental variables models. Our results suggest that the returns to high school completion may include less smoking but the health returns to GED receipt are much smaller. We find little evidence that high school completion is associated with less obesity.
Bibliography Citation
Kenkel, Donald S., Dean R. Lillard and Alan D. Mathios. "The Roles of High School Completion and GED Receipt in Smoking and Obesity." Journal of Labor Economics 24,3 (July 2006): 635-660.