YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
PARENTAL PREFERENCES AND SCHOOL COMPETITION: Justine S. Hastings, Thomas J. Kane, and Douglas O. Staiger November 2005 This paper uses data from the implementation of a district-wide public
school choice plan in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina to estimate preferences for
school characteristics and examine the ir implications for the local educational market.
We use parental rankings of their top three choices of schools matched with student
demographic and test score data to estimate a mixed-logit discrete choice demand model for
schools. We find that parents value proximity highly and the preference attached to a
schools mean test score increases with students income and own academic
ability. We also find considerable heterogeneity in preferences even after controlling for
income, academic achievement and race, with strong negative correlations between
preferences for academics and school proximity. Simulations of parental responses to test
score improvements at a school suggest that the demand response at high-performing schools
would be larger than the response at low-performing schools, leading to disparate
demand-side pressure to improve performance under school choice. Moreover, given the
greater sensitivity to school test scores among high-income and high-scoring youth, the
marginal students attracted when a school improves performance would typically raise the
average income and baseline test score at the school. |