Publication | Open Access
The Welfare Effects of Coordinated Assignment: Evidence from the New York City High School Match
132
Citations
35
References
2017
Year
EducationLawSchool OrganizationProgram EvaluationCollective Action ProblemSchool ChoiceNew MechanismExperimental EconomicsCoordinated AssignmentDecision TheoryMechanism DesignWelfare EffectsUtilitarian BenchmarkEqual Educational OpportunityPreference AggregationSocial BehaviorSociologySchool Assignment MechanismEducation PolicyIncentive Model
Coordinated single-offer school assignment systems are a popular education reform. We show that uncoordinated offers in NYC's school assignment mechanism generated mismatches. One-third of applicants were unassigned after the main round and later administratively placed at less desirable schools. We evaluate the effects of the new coordinated mechanism based on deferred acceptance using estimated student preferences. The new mechanism achieves 80 percent of the possible gains from a no-choice neighborhood extreme to a utilitarian benchmark. Coordinating offers dominates the effects of further algorithm modifications. Students most likely to be previously administratively assigned experienced the largest gains in welfare and subsequent achievement. (JEL C78, D82, I21, I28)
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