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ReStat2025

The Long-Term Impact of High School Financial Education: Evidence from Brazil

Miriam Bruhn, Gabriel Garber, Sergio Koyama, Bilal Zia

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1
Latest record
2025-12-18
Primary source
ReStat
TL;DR

As the financial system expands to new clients and services, countries are promoting financial education, with unknown long-run returns.

ReStatEducationLaborRCTExperiment
Metadata matches
Sources
ReStat
Fields
EducationLabor
Methods and data
RCTExperimentAdministrative data
Abstract

As the financial system expands to new clients and services, countries are promoting financial education, with unknown long-run returns. In 2011, we studied the short-run impact of a comprehensive financial education program through a randomized controlled trial with 892 high schools in Brazil. This paper uses administrative data for 16,000 students over the next nine years to measure the program's long-term impact. We find that treatment students are less likely to borrow from expensive sources or to make delayed loan repayments than control students. The program also caused students to shift from formal jobs to microenterprise ownership.

Source versions
ReStat2025-12-18
The Review of Economics and Statistics:1-45
10.1162/rest.a.1689
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