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Who Benefits from College Grant Aid and Why? Evidence from Texas
Who Benefits from College Grant Aid and Why? Evidence from Texas
Who Benefits from College Grant Aid and Why? Evidence from Texas

상세정보

자료유형  
 학위논문 서양
최종처리일시  
20250211151112
ISBN  
9798382777108
DDC  
370
저자명  
Galperin, Michael.
서명/저자  
Who Benefits from College Grant Aid and Why? Evidence from Texas
발행사항  
[Sl] : The University of Chicago, 2024
발행사항  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024
형태사항  
140 p
주기사항  
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-12, Section: A.
주기사항  
Advisor: Greenstone, Michael.
학위논문주기  
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Chicago, 2024.
초록/해제  
요약I use rich administrative data and several quasi-experiments in Texas to study which students benefit most from college grant aid and why. For "extensive-margin" students, grant aid causes enrollment in college, and therefore has potentially large benefits relative to these students' no-college counterfactual. In contrast, "intensive-margin" students would attend college even in the absence of additional aid, but nevertheless may benefit from additional financial support. The goal of this paper is to compare the costs and benefits of aid targeted at different groups of students and college sectors, and to understand the contributions of the intensive and extensive margins in shaping aid's overall effects. To do so, I leverage discontinuities in grant award rules which create variation in aid targeting three distinct populations: middle-income applicants to four-year colleges, low-income applicants to four-year colleges, and low-income applicants to community colleges. While these discontinuities provide exogenous variation in grant awards, I still encounter a common missing-data problem: my data contains all enrolled students, not all applicants, meaning that discontinuities in outcomes at the eligibility cutoff may conflate the causal effects of grants with compositional changes in enrolled students. I develop a bounding approach to overcome sample selection bias stemming from this missing-data problem. I find that grant aid targeted at low-income applicants to four-year colleges has large impacts on academic outcomes and students' future earnings. In sharp contrast, there is little overall effect of additional aid on academic outcomes and future earnings among middle-income applicants to four-year colleges and low-income applicants to community colleges. Across all three treatment margins, extensive-margin effects do not play a large positive role in determining the overall effects of grant aid.
일반주제명  
Education
일반주제명  
Community college education
일반주제명  
Education finance
키워드  
Community college
키워드  
Cost-benefit analysis
키워드  
Grant aid
키워드  
Higher education
키워드  
Pell Grant
기타저자  
The University of Chicago Economics
기본자료저록  
Dissertations Abstracts International. 85-12A.
전자적 위치 및 접속  
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MARC

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■1001  ▼aGalperin,  Michael.
■24510▼aWho  Benefits  from  College  Grant  Aid  and  Why?  Evidence  from  Texas
■260    ▼a[Sl]▼bThe  University  of  Chicago▼c2024
■260  1▼aAnn  Arbor▼bProQuest  Dissertations  &  Theses▼c2024
■300    ▼a140  p
■500    ▼aSource:  Dissertations  Abstracts  International,  Volume:  85-12,  Section:  A.
■500    ▼aAdvisor:  Greenstone,  Michael.
■5021  ▼aThesis  (Ph.D.)--The  University  of  Chicago,  2024.
■520    ▼aI  use  rich  administrative  data  and  several  quasi-experiments  in  Texas  to  study  which  students  benefit  most  from  college  grant  aid  and  why.  For  "extensive-margin"  students,  grant  aid  causes  enrollment  in  college,  and  therefore  has  potentially  large  benefits  relative  to  these  students'  no-college  counterfactual.  In  contrast,  "intensive-margin"  students  would  attend  college  even  in  the  absence  of  additional  aid,  but  nevertheless  may  benefit  from  additional  financial  support.  The  goal  of  this  paper  is  to  compare  the  costs  and  benefits  of  aid  targeted  at  different  groups  of  students  and  college  sectors,  and  to  understand  the  contributions  of  the  intensive  and  extensive  margins  in  shaping  aid's  overall  effects.  To  do  so,  I  leverage  discontinuities  in  grant  award  rules  which  create  variation  in  aid  targeting  three  distinct  populations:  middle-income  applicants  to  four-year  colleges,  low-income  applicants  to  four-year  colleges,  and  low-income  applicants  to  community  colleges.  While  these  discontinuities  provide  exogenous  variation  in  grant  awards,  I  still  encounter  a  common  missing-data  problem:  my  data  contains  all  enrolled  students,  not  all  applicants,  meaning  that  discontinuities  in  outcomes  at  the  eligibility  cutoff  may  conflate  the  causal  effects  of  grants  with  compositional  changes  in  enrolled  students.  I  develop  a  bounding  approach  to  overcome  sample  selection  bias  stemming  from  this  missing-data  problem.  I  find  that  grant  aid  targeted  at  low-income  applicants  to  four-year  colleges  has  large  impacts  on  academic  outcomes  and  students'  future  earnings.  In  sharp  contrast,  there  is  little  overall  effect  of  additional  aid  on  academic  outcomes  and  future  earnings  among  middle-income  applicants  to  four-year  colleges  and  low-income  applicants  to  community  colleges.  Across  all  three  treatment  margins,  extensive-margin  effects  do  not  play  a  large  positive  role  in  determining  the  overall  effects  of  grant  aid.
■590    ▼aSchool  code:  0330.
■650  4▼aEducation
■650  4▼aCommunity  college  education
■650  4▼aEducation  finance
■653    ▼aCommunity  college
■653    ▼aCost-benefit  analysis
■653    ▼aGrant  aid
■653    ▼aHigher  education
■653    ▼aPell  Grant
■690    ▼a0501
■690    ▼a0515
■690    ▼a0277
■690    ▼a0275
■71020▼aThe  University  of  Chicago▼bEconomics.
■7730  ▼tDissertations  Abstracts  International▼g85-12A.
■790    ▼a0330
■791    ▼aPh.D.
■792    ▼a2024
■793    ▼aEnglish
■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T17160759▼nKERIS▼z이  자료의  원문은  한국교육학술정보원에서  제공합니다.

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