This paper contributes to the understanding of how compulsory schooling regulations affect
educational attainment and subsequent labour market outcomes. It uses valuable information
from a natural experiment driven by rules that allow for variation in legal dropout dates. Since
the school leaving rule bites in the middle of a school year cohort, our identification approach
is immune to other relative age/peer effects. Information on the precise month of birth
enables us to show that students compelled to stay on in education as a result of this
compulsory school leaving rule attain higher qualification levels and see their participation
and employment probability as adults enhanced. We show that the estimated genuine impact
of attaining an academic qualification on participation and employment is always statistically
significant, in particular for women, although IV coefficients are usually below OLS estimates.
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