386926
386926
omssb
2019-05-15T13:12:00.000Z
no

Seminar

Forskningsseminar: The Returns to College(s): Estimating Value-Added and Match Effects in Higher Education

Foredragsholder
Jack Mountjoy, Princeton University / University of Chicago Booth School of Business
Dato
28. mai 2019
Når
11:45 - 12:45
Hvor
Auditoriet, SSB, Akersveien 26

Innhold

Photo of Jack Mountjoy

Jack Mountjoy, Princeton University / University of Chicago Booth School of Business

https://sites.google.com/site/jackmountjoyeconomics/

The Returns to College(s): Estimating Value-Added and Match Effects in Higher Education

Students who attend different colleges and universities in the United States end up with vastly different educational and labor market outcomes. We estimate value-added of individual institutions to decompose these differences into causal contributions of colleges versus selection bias from student sorting. Linking administrative registries of high school records, college applications and admissions, enrollments and degree completions, and quarterly earnings spanning the Texas population, we identify institutional value-added across the diverse distribution of Texas public universities by comparing the outcomes of students who apply to and are admitted by the same set of institutions, as this "matched applicant" approach strikingly balances student ability measures across college treatments and delivers value-added estimates impervious to additional controls. We find that differences in value-added across colleges are nearly an order of magnitude smaller than raw differences in mean outcomes, and value-added on earnings is uncorrelated with selectivity. Colleges that boost persistence, BA completion, and STEM degrees also tend to boost earnings, and college input measures like instructional expenditures and full-time faculty share are moderately correlated with value-added. We probe the potential for (mis)match effects by allowing value-added to vary flexibly by student characteristics, including race, gender, family income, and pre-college measures of cognitive and non-cognitive skills. At first glance, black students appear to face small negative returns to attending more selective colleges, but this pattern of modest "mismatch" is entirely driven by the presence of two large historically black universities (HBCUs) in Texas that have low average incoming SAT scores but yield value-added for black students; across the non-HBCUs, black students face similar returns to selectivity as students from other backgrounds.

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