2023-06-21T08:51:01Z
2025-07-01T05:10:07Z
2023-07-01
2023-06-21T08:51:01Z
We study whether college admissions should implement quotas for lower-income applicants. We develop an overlapping-generation 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-maximising 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.
Article
Accepted version
English
Relacions intergeneracionals; Proves d'accés a la universitat; Planificació educativa; Intergenerational relations; Entrance examinations for universities; Educational planning
Oxford University Press
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/uead016
The Economic Journal, 2023, vol. 133, num. 653, p. 1810-1845
https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/uead016
(c) Royal Economic Society, 2023
Economia [1045]