Citation
Beulaygue, Isabelle Christine (2018). Marijuana initiation and labor market outcomes.
Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. Philadelphia, PA.
Abstract
Using various statistical models applied to data from the Add Health Survey, we estimate the associations between early initiation of marijuana use (i.e., middle school or high school), human capital formation, and earnings as a young adult. Results show that early initiation of marijuana use is negatively related to both human capital formation and earnings, but the estimated relationships for earnings are diminished considerably in augmented models that control for human capital and other socioeconomic characteristics. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that early marijuana use indirectly affects adult earnings through its negative effects on human capital formation. We also find weak evidence of a direct negative association between current marijuana use and earnings. Considered collectively, these findings suggest that very early initiation (i.e., age 14 or younger) of marijuana use may diminish educational attainment and labor market outcomes as a young adult, but the consequences are small or non-existent for later initiators and current marijuana users.
URL
https://convention2.allacademic.com/one/asa/asa18/index.php?cmd=Online+Program+View+Paper&selected_paper_id=1377664Keyword(s)
marijuana initiation human capital earnings
Reference Type
Conference proceeding
Book Title
Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association
Series Title
1512. Section on Sociology of Alcohol, Drugs, and Tobacco Roundtable Session
Author(s)
Beulaygue, Isabelle Christine
Year Published
2018
City of Publication
Philadelphia, PA
Reference ID
8273