I develop and structurally estimate an equilibrium model of the college market. Students, who are heterogeneous in both abilities and preferences, make college application decisions, subject to uncertainty and application costs. Colleges observe only noisy measures of student ability and set up tuition and admissions policies to compete for more able students. The model incorporates tuition, applications, admissions and enrollment as the joint outcome from a subgame perfect Nash equilibrium. I estimate the structural parameters of the model using the NLSY 97 data, via a three-step estimation procedure to deal with potential multiple equilibria. I use the estimated model to perform three counterfactual experiments. First, I explore the impac...
This dissertation consists of three essays on market design and auction theory. In the first chapter...
This paper determines that the main cause of the increase in net tuition is declining state grants a...
More than one-third of American undergraduate students attend two-year colleges (also called communi...
I develop and structurally estimate an equilibrium model of the college market. Students, who are he...
I develop and structurally estimate an equilibrium model of the college market. Students, who are he...
I develop and estimate a structural equilibrium model of the college market. Students, having hetero...
I develop and estimate a structural equilibrium model of the college market. Stu-dents, having heter...
This study theoretically analyses college admission mechanisms where students’ applications have unc...
We consider a decentralized college admissions problem with uncertainty. We assume that a continuum ...
This paper introduces and explores signalling in the market for education based on heterogeneity in ...
This paper develops a series of models for optimal tuition pricing for private colleges and universi...
The purpose of the dissertation is to study the role of market structure and education policy on the...
Undergraduate enrollment increased over 50 percent nationally from 1973 to 1994. The proportion of h...
For the past couple of decades, college tuition prices have risen consistently and substantially. Le...
We develop a decentralized Bayesian model of college admissions with two ranked colleges, heterogene...
This dissertation consists of three essays on market design and auction theory. In the first chapter...
This paper determines that the main cause of the increase in net tuition is declining state grants a...
More than one-third of American undergraduate students attend two-year colleges (also called communi...
I develop and structurally estimate an equilibrium model of the college market. Students, who are he...
I develop and structurally estimate an equilibrium model of the college market. Students, who are he...
I develop and estimate a structural equilibrium model of the college market. Students, having hetero...
I develop and estimate a structural equilibrium model of the college market. Stu-dents, having heter...
This study theoretically analyses college admission mechanisms where students’ applications have unc...
We consider a decentralized college admissions problem with uncertainty. We assume that a continuum ...
This paper introduces and explores signalling in the market for education based on heterogeneity in ...
This paper develops a series of models for optimal tuition pricing for private colleges and universi...
The purpose of the dissertation is to study the role of market structure and education policy on the...
Undergraduate enrollment increased over 50 percent nationally from 1973 to 1994. The proportion of h...
For the past couple of decades, college tuition prices have risen consistently and substantially. Le...
We develop a decentralized Bayesian model of college admissions with two ranked colleges, heterogene...
This dissertation consists of three essays on market design and auction theory. In the first chapter...
This paper determines that the main cause of the increase in net tuition is declining state grants a...
More than one-third of American undergraduate students attend two-year colleges (also called communi...