The Importance of Being Local? Administrative Decentralisation and Human Development
Latika Chaudhary, Lakshmi Iyer
We examine the human development consequences of transferring responsibility for public service provision from state to local governments in India using state-level variation in the timing of administrative decentrali...
We examine the human development consequences of transferring responsibility for public service provision from state to local governments in India using state-level variation in the timing of administrative decentralisation reforms. We find that devolving responsibility for health and education functions does not improve child mortality or school completion. Further, partial devolution of service responsibility without concomitant authority over personnel or taxation results in a significant worsening of neonatal, infant and under-5 child mortality. Our results cannot be attributed to differential pre-trends, omitted variables bias or heterogeneous treatment effects.
Diversifying Society’s Leaders? The Determinants and Causal Effects of Admission to Highly Selective Private Colleges
Raj Chetty, David J Deming, John N Friedman
Religion, Education, and the State
Samuel Bazzi, Masyhur Hilmy, Benjamin Marx
Federal Tax Deductions and the Demand for Local Public Goods
Brent W. Ambrose, Maxence Valentin
The Impact of EITC on Education, Labour Market Trajectories, and Inequalities
Julien Albertini, Arthur Poirier, Anthony Terriau