Abstract
Educated people are generally healthier, have fewer comorbidities and live longer than people with less education. Previous evidence about the effects of education come from observational studies many of which are affected by residual confounding. Legal changes to the minimum school leave age is a potential natural experiment which provides a potentially more robust source of evidence about the effects of schooling. Previous studies have exploited this natural experiment using population-level administrative data to investigate mortality, and relatively small surveys to investigate the effect on mortality. Here, we add to the evidence using data from a large sample from the UK Biobank. We exploit the raising of the school-leaving age in the UK in September 1972 as a natural experiment and regression discontinuity and instrumental variable estimators to identify the causal effects of staying on in school. Remaining in school was positively associated with 23 of 25 outcomes. After accounting for multiple hypothesis testing, we found evidence of causal effects on twelve outcomes, however, the associations of schooling and intelligence, smoking, and alcohol consumption may be due to genomic and socioeconomic confounding factors. Education affects some, but not all health and socioeconomic outcomes. Differences between educated and less educated people may be partially due to residual genetic and socioeconomic confounding.
Significance Statement On average people who choose to stay in education for longer are healthier, wealthier, and live longer. We investigated the causal effects of education on health, income, and well-being later in life. This is the largest study of its kind to date and it has objective clinic measures of morbidity and aging. We found evidence that people who were forced to remain in school had higher wages and lower mortality. However, there was little evidence of an effect on intelligence later in life. Furthermore, estimates of the effects of education using conventionally adjusted regression analysis are likely to suffer from genomic confounding. In conclusion, education affects some, but not all health outcomes later in life.
Funding The Medical Research Council (MRC) and the University of Bristol fund the MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit [MC_UU_12013/1, MC_UU_12013/9]. NMD is supported by the Economics and Social Research Council (ESRC) via a Future Research Leaders Fellowship [ES/N000757/1]. The research described in this paper was specifically funded by a grant from the Economics and Social Research Council for Transformative Social Science. No funding body has influenced data collection, analysis or its interpretations. This publication is the work of the authors, who serve as the guarantors for the contents of this paper. This work was carried out using the computational facilities of the Advanced Computing Research Centre -http://www.bris.ac.uk/acrc/ and the Research Data Storage Facility of the University of Bristol — http://www.bris.ac.uk/acrc/storage/. This research was conducted using the UK Biobank Resource.
Data access The statistical code used to produce these results can be accessed here: (https://github.com/nmdavies/UKbiobankROSLA). The final analysis dataset used in this study is archived with UK Biobank, which can be accessed by contacting UK Biobank access{at}biobank.ac.uk.