Income-based affirmative action in college admissions [WP]

Publication date

2022-07-04T21:54:02Z

2022-07-04T21:54:02Z

2022

Abstract

We study whether college admissions should implement quotas for lower-income applicants. We develop an overlapping-generations model and calibrate it to data from Brazil, where such a policy is widely implemented. In our model, parents choose how much to invest in their child’s education, thereby increasing both human capital and likelihood of college admission. We find that, in the long run, the optimal income-based affirmative action increases welfare and aggregate output. It improves the pool of admitted students but distorts pre-college educational investments. The welfare-maximizing policy benefits lower- to middle-income applicants with income-based quotas, while higher-income applicants face fiercer competition in college admissions. The optimal policy reduces intergenerational persistence of earnings by 5.7% and makes nearly 80% of households better off.

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

Publisher

Universitat de Barcelona. Facultat d'Economia i Empresa

Related items

UB Economics – Working Papers, 2022, E22/425

[WP E-Eco22/425]

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Brotherhood et al., 2022

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/

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