Does competition among public schools benefit students and t
Does competition among public schools benefit students and taxpayers?
6 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"In an influential paper, Hoxby (2000) studies the relationship between the degree of so-called "Tiebout choice" among local school districts within a metropolitan area and average test scores. She argues that choice is endogenous to school quality, and instruments with the number of larger and smaller streams. She finds a large positive effect of choice on test scores, which she interprets as evidence that school choice induces greater school productivity. This paper revisits Hoxby's analysis. I document several important errors in Hoxby's data and code. I also demonstrate that the estimated choice effect is extremely sensitive to the way that "larger streams" are coded. When Hoxby's hand count of larger streams is replaced with any of several alternative, easily replicable measures, there is no significant difference between IV and OLS, each of which indicates a choice effect near zero. There is thus little evidence that schools respond to Tiebout competition by raising productivity. A data appendix for this paper is available online*Published: Forthcoming, American Economic Review"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Jesse Rothstein
Affirmative action in law scho
Affirmative action in law school admissions
Carry That Quota
Carry That Quota
Constrained after college
Constrained after college
Good principals or good peers?
Good principals or good peers?
Mismatch in law school
Mismatch in law school
Permanent income and the black
Permanent income and the black-white test score gap