For-profit providers are becoming an increasingly important fixture of
US higher education markets. Students who attend for-profit institutions
take on more educational debt, have worse labor market outcomes, and
are more likely to default than students attending similarly-selective
public schools. Because for-profits tend to serve students from more
disadvantaged backgrounds, it is important to isolate the causal effect
of for-profit enrollment on educational and labor market outcomes.
This study approaches this problem using a novel instrument combined with more
comprehensive data on student outcomes than has been employed in prior
research, leveraging the interaction between changes in
the demand for college due to labor demand shocks and the local supply
of for-profit schools.
The authors compare enrollment and postsecondary outcome
changes across areas that experience similar labor demand shocks but
that have different latent supply of for-profit institutions.
Key findings:
- The first-stage estimates show that students are much more likely to enroll in a for-profit institution for a given labor demand change when there is a higher supply of such schools in the base period.
- Among four-year students, for-profit enrollment leads to more loans, higher loan amounts, an increased likelihood of borrowing, an increased risk of default and worse labor market outcomes.
- Two-year for-profit students also take out more loans, have higher default rates and lower earnings. But, they are more likely to graduate and to earn over $25,000 per year (the median earnings of high school graduates).
- For-profit entry and exit decisions are at most weakly responsive to labor demand shocks.
The results point to low returns to for-profit
enrollment that have important implications for public investments in
higher education as well as how students make postsecondary choices.
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