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Secondary Education
Its Impact on Border Income
Thomas F. Fullerton, Jr.
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
June 2001
Many immigrants from Mexico and Central
America are coming to Texas without high school degrees. What
they, and native-born Texans who fail to complete high school,
are finding as they settle along the border are emerging service
sectors that offer high-salary jobs but generally require
an advanced education. This situation sets up a potentially
debilitating mismatch with important income impacts. Texas
border counties adjacent to Mexico conceivably lost as much
as $3.6 billion in earnings in 1990 because so many area residents
did not graduate from high school, according to our study
of socioeconomic data for that year. [1]
Given the limited tax bases of nearly
all border counties, the benefits of improving educational
attainment are quite clear. Our study shows that reducing
the high school dropout rate to a level equal to the rest
of Texas would have potentially increased income per border
resident by more than $2,600 in 1990.
The discrepancy between educational
and income levels becomes even more apparent as Texas enters
the new millennium more ethnically diverse, with more immigrants
from Mexico and Central America who have not graduated from
high school. Simultaneously, the state's economy enters the
new age with expanding service segments. In fact, earnings
loss estimates would likely be much higher had we been able
to perform the study using 2000 census data.
Data and Methodology
Econometric estimates conducted at the
University of Texas at El Paso measure the relationships between
education and regional earnings across Texas and help examine
how changes in educational attainment affect an area. Our
central hypothesis is that Texas border county income is affected
by educational attainment in a way similar to other regions
of the United States. To test it, we collected figures for
formal years of schooling, types of degrees completed and
1990 per capita income levels for all 254 counties. The figures
come from the Department of Commerce's 1990 census and the
Bureau of Economic Analysis' Regional Economic Information
System. Using this information, we simulated what would have
happened to per capita income in the border counties in 1990
if their high school completion rates had met the state average.
As in similar studies, our variables
included the percentage of high school dropouts aged 25 or
older in each county, high school graduates 25 or older with
some college and college graduates 25 or older. Other variables
included the participation rate of females in the labor force,
percentage of the population 65 or older and percentage of
residents 18 or younger. We also included language skills.
Generally, per capita income is higher if more residents of
a county speak fluent English and have bilingual skills, while
Spanish-only skills are likely to be associated with lower
earnings.
Increases in the percentage of high
school dropouts are expected to reduce a county's income level,
and increases in the percentages of both categories of graduates
are likely to improve it. Similarly, increases in female labor
force participation should raise a county's income level.
As the percentage of youth increases in a county, per capita
income likely declines because individuals 18 or younger generally
do not work or hold part-time positions. The effect of the
number of retirees on a county's income is unclear because
many drop out of the labor force but simultaneously begin
receiving sizable transfer payments.
Variables of geography and industry
mix also can play important roles in determining income performance.
Large counties with 1990 populations of more than 600,000
are expected to have higher earnings levels, while more rural
border counties likely will have lower earnings. Geographic
estimates also can be calculated for other regions of the
state, but the border region is especially interesting because
of its economic and demographic differences from Texas as
a whole.
Empirical Results
Our study shows that improving secondary
school completion rates yields striking results. The single
largest gain —$5,760 a year per resident—would come in Starr
County in the Rio Grande Valley. Raising its high school graduation
rate to the state average would permit Starr County to more
than double its 1990 per capita income, a yearly total of
more than $210 million. In nearby Hidalgo County, income per
person would rise by more than $3,600 annually, or a total
of more than $1.26 billion. Personal incomes in Cameron, El
Paso and Webb counties also would rise by more than $400 million
if their cumulative graduation rates were brought to the state
average. For all border counties, nearly $3.6 billion in forgone
income results from a dropout rate that exceeds the state
average.
Table 1 shows implied income losses
due to high school noncompletion in 13 border counties and
the region overall. Column 2 calculates the effect on per
capita income of raising each county's high school graduation
rate to the 1990 Texas state average of 72.1 percent. Column
3 calculates the aggregate economic impact of these lost earnings.
| Table 1 |
| Implied Income Losses Due to High School
Noncompletion |
| County |
Per
capita impact |
Aggregate
impact
(in millions) |
| Brewster |
Not
calculated |
Not
calculated |
| Cameron |
$3,143
|
$744.7
|
| El
Paso |
1,195
|
643.8
|
| Hidalgo |
3,627
|
1,262.5
|
| Hudspeth |
3,413
|
9.2
|
| Jeff
Davis |
370
|
.7
|
| Kinney |
2,261
|
6.6
|
| Maverick |
5,177
|
170.4
|
| Presidio |
4,011
|
24.5
|
| Starr |
5,760
|
210.2
|
| Terrell |
825
|
1.1
|
| Val
Verde |
2,276
|
80.1
|
| Webb |
3,456
|
413.8
|
| Zapata |
3,129
|
26.3
|
| Border
zone |
$2,620
|
$3,593.9
|
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| NOTES: All impacts calculated in
dollars for 1990 relative to the Texas state average.
Border zone estimate is a weighted average net of Brewster
County. Brewster County impacts are not calculated because
its high school graduation rate exceeds the Texas state
average. |
Furthermore, our study found that increases
in the percentage of the population over 65 are associated
with income gains throughout Texas. According to our findings,
residency in urban areas is associated with higher per capita
incomes, while the border region is linked to lower incomes.
Presumably, the latter result partially reflects language
and other skill shortfalls often observed in areas where recent
immigrants have settled. Infrastructure gaps relative to the
rest of Texas also contribute to that finding.
As state and national labor markets
change, the implied costs of high school noncompletion may
fall below their true level. Namely, service sector or education
positions account for the majority of new jobs in Texas, and
many of these jobs require training beyond a high school degree.
Failure to graduate from high school is thus likely to impose
a more severe financial penalty today than in 1990.
Conclusion
Regional economic research has attempted
to quantify the relationships between per capita incomes and
socioeconomic factors. Our study, which focused on the state's
254 counties, simulated how education affects per capita income
and underscored the importance of high school graduation for
people in border counties. Reducing the high school dropout
rate to a level commensurate with the rest of the state would
have potentially increased income per border resident by more
than $2,600 annually in 1990. Collectively, that figure implies
nearly a $3.6 billion earnings loss for border county economies.
Data from the 2000 census are likely to indicate an even larger
income loss linked to the lack of educational attainment.
From a public policy perspective, border
counties and other regions within the state will realize direct
financial benefit by reducing high school dropout rates. Furthermore,
border counties also may increase income performance by improving
public infrastructure. More advanced transportation and communication
networks with the rest of Texas will help offset the income
decline partially attributable to geographic isolation and
distance from other regional markets.
| About the Author
Fullerton is an assistant
professor and Fulbright Border Scholar in the
Department of Economics and Finance at the University
of Texas at El Paso.
Notes
The Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas provided financial support for this
research. El Paso Electric Co. and the Center
for Inter-American and Border Studies at the University
of Texas at El Paso provided additional funding.
Helpful comments were provided by Mine Yücel,
Pia Orrenius and Jim Peach. David Torres and Roberto
Tinajero provided econometric research assistance.
- For an in-depth discussion of the study,
see Thomas M. Fullerton, Jr., "Educational
Attainment and Border Income Performance,"
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic
and Financial Review, forthcoming.
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