Do inclusive education policies improve employment opportunities?: evidence from a field experiment

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Date

2020-12

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Universidad del Pacífico. Centro de Investigación

Abstract

In labor markets where disadvantaged students are discriminated against, merit-based college scholarships targeting these students could convey two opposing signals to employers. There is a positive signal reflecting the candidate’s cognitive ability (talented in high-school and able to maintain a high GPA in college) as well as her soft skills (overcoming poverty). There is also a possible negative signal as the targeting of the scholarship indicates that the beneficiary comes from a disadvantaged household. We conduct a correspondence study to analyze the labor market impact of an inclusive education program. Beca 18 provides merit-based scholarships to talented poor students admitted to 3-year and 5-year colleges in Peru. We find that the positive signal dominates. Including information of being a scholarship recipient increases the likelihood of getting a callback for a job interview by 20%. However, the effect is much smaller in jobs and careers where the poor are under-represented, suggesting that the negative signal of the scholarship is not zero.

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Keywords

Programa Nacional Beca 18 (Perú), Educación superior--Perú, Educación inclusiva--Perú, Discriminación en el trabajo--Perú, Mercado laboral--Perú, Egresados universitarios--Trabajo--Perú

Citation

Monge Agüero, J., Galarza, F., & Yamada Fukusaki, G. (2020). Do inclusive education policies improve employment opportunities?: Evidence from a field experiment (Documento de discusión No. 2001). Universidad del Pacífico. https://hdl.handle.net/11354/3104

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