Upping the Ante

This paper tests for financial constraints as a market failure in education in a low-income country. In an experimental setup, unconditional cash grants are allocated to one private school or all private schools in a village. Enrollment increases in both treatments, accompanied by infrastructure investments. However, test scores and fees only increase in the setting of all private schools along with higher teacher wages. This differential impact follows from a canonical oligopoly model with capacity constraints and endogenous quality: greater financial saturation crowds-in quality investments. The findings of higher social surplus in the setting of all private schools, but greater private returns in the setting of one private school underscore the importance of leveraging market structure in designing educational subsidies.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrabi, Tahir, Das, Jishnu, Khwaja, Asim I., Ozyurt, Selcuk, Singh, Niharika
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-08
Subjects:PRIVATE EDUCATION, FINANCIAL INNOVATION, STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT, EDUCATION MARKETS, RETURN TO CAPITAL, SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES, SMEs, UNCONDITIONAL CASH TRANSFERS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/489361534875600698/Upping-the-ante-the-equilibrium-effects-of-unconditional-grants-to-private-schools
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30290
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