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Report Cards: The Impact of Providing School and Child Test Scores on Educational Markets
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Andrabi, Tahir (Author)
- Das, Jishnu (Author)
- Khwaja, Asim Ijaz (Author)
Title
Report Cards: The Impact of Providing School and Child Test Scores on Educational Markets
Abstract
We study the impact of providing school report cards with test scores on subsequent test scores, prices, and enrollment in markets with multiple public and private providers. A randomly selected half of our sample villages (markets) received report cards. This increased test scores by 0.11 standard deviations, decreased private school fees by 17 percent, and increased primary enrollment by 4.5 percent. Heterogeneity in the treatment impact by initial school test scores is consistent with canonical models of asymmetric information. Information provision facilitates better comparisons across providers, and improves market efficiency and child welfare through higher test scores, higher enrollment, and lower fees.
Publication
American Economic Review
Volume
107
Issue
6
Pages
1535-1563
Date
2017/06
Language
en
ISSN
0002-8282
Short Title
Report Cards
Accessed
12/02/2024, 21:24
Library Catalogue
Citation
Andrabi, T., Das, J., & Khwaja, A. I. (2017). Report Cards: The Impact of Providing School and Child Test Scores on Educational Markets. American Economic Review, 107(6), 1535–1563. https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.20140774
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