Emigration Prospects, Gender-based Preferences, and the Choice of Major


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Date

2025-02

Publication Type

Working Paper

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

We explore how emigration prospects influence students’ choice of university majors in a high-emigration setting. Using a discrete choice experiment in Bosnia and Herzegovina, we find that students prioritize salary prospects when choosing their major. Moreover, students—including those who do not intend to migrate—place significant weight on emigration prospects when choosing a major. This finding reveals how students factor emigration into their decisions, even if they do not plan to leave. Our analysis also shows that male and female students exhibit similar preferences, consistently valuing salary the most, followed by emigration prospects and job flexibility. While we observe some gender-based differences, they are less pronounced than those observed in similar experiments in low-emigration countries. We argue that, in a relatively less stable economic context, students’ drive for financial stability and employability reshapes their education choices.

Publication status

published

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Book title

Volume

25

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

ETH Zurich, Chair of Education Systems

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

TVET; Governance; University Major Choice; Emigration Prospects; Gender Preferences

Organisational unit

09704 - Renold, Ursula / Renold, Ursula check_circle

Notes

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