Publication | Open Access
Long Live Keju! The Persistent Effects of China’s Civil Examination System
318
Citations
49
References
2020
Year
Chinese Foreign PolicyChinese LawEast Asian StudiesEducational AttainmentEducationSocial StratificationCivil Examination SystemPersistent EffectsPersistent ImpactHuman Capital DevelopmentPersistent EffectLanguage StudiesChinese PoliticsSocial InequalitySocial ClassEast Asian LanguagesEducational StatisticsChinese CultureLive KejuEducation PolicyEducation Economics
Abstract China's civil examination system (keju), an incredibly long-lived institution, has a persistent impact on human capital outcomes today. Using the variation in the density of jinshi—the highest qualification—across 278 Chinese prefectures in the Ming-Qing period (c. 1368–1905) to proxy for this effect, we find that a doubling of jinshi per 10,000 population leads to an 8.5% increase in years of schooling in 2010. The persistent effect of keju can be attributed to a multitude of channels including cultural transmission, educational infrastructure, social capital and, to a lesser extent, political elites.
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