Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile

Education is a powerful tool for social mobility and cultural integration. However, it is one of the largest hurdles for migrants—particularly for forcefully displaced migrants, given their more vulnerable condition and lack of resources to pay for...

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Main Authors: Blanco, Christian, Meneses, Francisco, Villamizar-Chaparro, Mateo
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099321006232214741/IDU098e3e45807dbf0416d0b96c006008f32a01a
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37599
id okr-10986-37599
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-375992022-06-28T05:10:41Z Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile Blanco, Christian Meneses, Francisco Villamizar-Chaparro, Mateo FORCED MIGRANTS EDUCATIONAL INCLUSION HIGHER EDUCATION FINANCIAL AID REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY ACCESS TO EDUCATION TERTIARY EDUCATION ACCESS FOR MIGRANTS CUT-OFF FOR EDUCATION FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS FOR FINANCIAL AID BARRIERS TO EDUCATION BARRIERS TO UPWARD MOBILITY FORCEFULLY DISPLACED MIGRANTS Education is a powerful tool for social mobility and cultural integration. However, it is one of the largest hurdles for migrants—particularly for forcefully displaced migrants, given their more vulnerable condition and lack of resources to pay for private education. This paper explores educational gaps between migrants and natives in Chile, a country that provides free public education to newcomers. The paper analyzes an administrative data set that includes all students in the Chilean educational system and follows students from 2017 to 2018. Using a research discontinuity design around the cut-off for financial aid to tertiary education, this paper investigates whether access to financial aid generates incentives for forced migrants to enroll in tertiary education. This research confirms previous findings that show that migrants have lower advancement and enrollment rates than natives at every school level. Moreover, it finds that financial aid applications constitute a major roadblock preventing migrant students from accessing higher education. Furthermore, the paper presents suggestive evidence showing that the interaction between the type of school (vocational vs. technical) and the migrant condition affects applications for financial aid. 2022-06-27T15:55:52Z 2022-06-27T15:55:52Z 2022-06 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099321006232214741/IDU098e3e45807dbf0416d0b96c006008f32a01a http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37599 English Policy Research Working Papers;10104 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Chile
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FORCED MIGRANTS
EDUCATIONAL INCLUSION
HIGHER EDUCATION
FINANCIAL AID
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
TERTIARY EDUCATION ACCESS FOR MIGRANTS
CUT-OFF FOR EDUCATION FINANCIAL AID
APPLICATIONS FOR FINANCIAL AID
BARRIERS TO EDUCATION
BARRIERS TO UPWARD MOBILITY
FORCEFULLY DISPLACED MIGRANTS
spellingShingle FORCED MIGRANTS
EDUCATIONAL INCLUSION
HIGHER EDUCATION
FINANCIAL AID
REGRESSION DISCONTINUITY
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
TERTIARY EDUCATION ACCESS FOR MIGRANTS
CUT-OFF FOR EDUCATION FINANCIAL AID
APPLICATIONS FOR FINANCIAL AID
BARRIERS TO EDUCATION
BARRIERS TO UPWARD MOBILITY
FORCEFULLY DISPLACED MIGRANTS
Blanco, Christian
Meneses, Francisco
Villamizar-Chaparro, Mateo
Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
geographic_facet Chile
relation Policy Research Working Papers;10104
description Education is a powerful tool for social mobility and cultural integration. However, it is one of the largest hurdles for migrants—particularly for forcefully displaced migrants, given their more vulnerable condition and lack of resources to pay for private education. This paper explores educational gaps between migrants and natives in Chile, a country that provides free public education to newcomers. The paper analyzes an administrative data set that includes all students in the Chilean educational system and follows students from 2017 to 2018. Using a research discontinuity design around the cut-off for financial aid to tertiary education, this paper investigates whether access to financial aid generates incentives for forced migrants to enroll in tertiary education. This research confirms previous findings that show that migrants have lower advancement and enrollment rates than natives at every school level. Moreover, it finds that financial aid applications constitute a major roadblock preventing migrant students from accessing higher education. Furthermore, the paper presents suggestive evidence showing that the interaction between the type of school (vocational vs. technical) and the migrant condition affects applications for financial aid.
format Working Paper
author Blanco, Christian
Meneses, Francisco
Villamizar-Chaparro, Mateo
author_facet Blanco, Christian
Meneses, Francisco
Villamizar-Chaparro, Mateo
author_sort Blanco, Christian
title Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
title_short Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
title_full Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
title_fullStr Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
title_full_unstemmed Why Student Aid Matters? Roadblocks to the Transition into Higher Education for Forced Migrants in Chile
title_sort why student aid matters? roadblocks to the transition into higher education for forced migrants in chile
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099321006232214741/IDU098e3e45807dbf0416d0b96c006008f32a01a
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37599
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