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Article Dans Une Revue Applied Economics Année : 2016

Tuition Fees and Social Segregation : Lessons from a Natural Experiment at the University of Paris 9-Dauphine

Résumé

Using a natural experiment, a sharp rise in tuition fees in some of the programmes at the University of Paris 9-Dauphine, we study the impact of tuition fees on students’ pathways, and outcomes. We apply an optimal matching method to the national database of students’ registrations (SISE) to define a typology of pathways. We then use a nonordered multinomial logit model to evaluate the impact of the rise in tuition fees on the types of pathways selected by the university. We show that there is a significant impact on these pathways. The increase in tuition fees reduces geographic and social mobility, thereby accentuating the phenomena of social segregation. Furthermore, contrary to what some of the studies assert, the rise does not appear to encourage greater effort: we find no impact on the graduation success rate.

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Dates et versions

hal-01346937 , version 1 (20-07-2016)

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Léonard Moulin, David Flacher, Hugo Harari-Kermadec. Tuition Fees and Social Segregation : Lessons from a Natural Experiment at the University of Paris 9-Dauphine. Applied Economics, 2016, 48 (40), pp.3861-3876. ⟨10.1080/00036846.2016.1148253⟩. ⟨hal-01346937⟩
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