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- Title
Marginal Effects of Merit Aid for Low-Income Students*.
- Authors
Angrist, Joshua; Autor, David; Pallais, Amanda
- Abstract
Financial aid from the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation (STBF) provides comprehensive support to a student population similar to that served by a host of state aid programs. In conjunction with STBF, we randomly assigned aid awards to thousands of Nebraska high school graduates from low-income, minority, and first-generation college households. Randomly assigned STBF awards boost bachelor's (BA) degree completion for students targeting four-year schools by about 8 points. Degree gains are concentrated among four-year college applicants who would otherwise have been unlikely to pursue a four-year program. Degree effects are mediated by award-induced increases in credits earned toward a BA in the first year of college. The extent of initial four-year college engagement explains differences in impact by target campus and across covariate subgroups. The projected lifetime earnings effect of awards exceeds marginal educational spending for all of the subgroups examined in the study. Projected earnings gains exceed funder costs for urban students and for students with relatively weak academic preparation.
- Subjects
COLLEGE applicants; FINANCIAL aid; HIGH school graduates
- Publication
Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2022, Vol 137, Issue 2, p1039
- ISSN
0033-5533
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/qje/qjab050