Barriers to entry and development


Autoria(s): Teixeira, Arilton
Data(s)

12/04/2016

12/04/2016

2007

Resumo

This paper analyzes the effect of an accountability system in the Brazilian college market. For each discipline, colleges were assigned a grade that depended on the scores of their students on the ENC, an annual mandatory exam. Those grades were then disclosed to the public, giving applicants information about college quality. The system also established rewards and penalties based on the colleges’ grades. I find that the ENC had a substantial effect on different measures of college quality, such as faculty education and the proportion of full-time faculty. The detailed information from this unique dataset and the fact that the ENC started being required for different disciplines in different years allow me to control for time-specific effects, thus minimizing the bias caused by policy endogeneity. Indeed, I find strong evidence on the importance of controlling for time-specific effects: estimates of the impact of the ENC on college quality more than double when I do not take those effects into account. The ENC also affects positively the ratio between applicants and vacancies, and it decreases the faculty and the entering class sizes. The results suggest that its introduction fostered competition and favored colleges entering the market.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/16345

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Escola de Pós-Graduação em Economia da FGV

Relação

Seminários de pesquisa econômica da EPGE;

Palavras-Chave #Barreiras à entrada (Organização industrial) #Monopólios
Tipo

Working Paper