Article

College Choice, Selection and Allocation Mechanisms: A Structural Empirical Analysis

José-Raimundo Carvalho, Thierry Magnac, and Qizhou Xiong

Abstract

We use rich microeconomic data on performance and choices of students at college entry to analyze interactions between the selection mechanism, eliciting college preferences through exams, and the allocation mechanism. We set up a framework in which success probabilities and student preferences are shown to be identified from data on their choices and their exam grades under exclusion restrictions and support conditions. The counterfactuals we consider balance the severity of congestion and the quality of the match between schools and students. Moving to deferred acceptance or inverting the timing of choices and exams are shown to increase welfare. Redistribution among students and among schools is also sizeable in all counterfactual experiments.

Keywords

Education; two-sided matching; school allocation mechanism; policy evaluation;

JEL codes

  • C57: Econometrics of Games
  • D47: Market Design
  • I21: Analysis of Education

Replaces

José-Raimundo Carvalho, Thierry Magnac, and Qizhou Xiong, College Choice Allocation Mechanisms: Structural Estimates and Counterfactuals, TSE Working Paper, n. 14-506, June 2014.

Reference

José-Raimundo Carvalho, Thierry Magnac, and Qizhou Xiong, College Choice, Selection and Allocation Mechanisms: A Structural Empirical Analysis, Quantitative Economics, vol. 10, October 2019, pp. 1233–1277.

Published in

Quantitative Economics, vol. 10, October 2019, pp. 1233–1277