Tuition Fees, Student Finances, and Student Achievement - Evidence from a Differential Raise in Fees

Author/s: 

Hans Fricke

Year of Publication: 
2018
Publication: 
The Journal of Human Capital
Volume/Issue: 
12(3)
Pages: 
504-541

This study analyzes the effects of an increase in the cost of going to college on student finances and achievement. It exploits a unique policy change at a Swiss university whereby students faced an unexpected increase in tuition fees. This increase differed across students. The study uses this variation in a difference-in-differences strategy to identify and estimate the causal effect of the differential increase in fees. Results based on survey data suggest that students compensate the increase in fees with a reduction in consumption spending. In line with this finding, the estimated effects on on-time graduation, credits earned, and grades, based on data from administrative student records, are close to zero and insignificant.

Primary Research Area:

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APA Citation

Fricke, H. (2018). Tuition Fees, Student Finances, and Student Achievement - Evidence from a Differential Raise in Fees. The Journal of Human Capital, 12(3), 504-541.