Papers
ReStat2026

Sibling Spillovers and Free Schooling

João R. Ferreira, Wayne Aaron Sandholtz

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-05-14
Primary source
ReStat
TL;DR

We use administrative data to measure sibling spillovers on academic performance before and after the introduction of Free Secondary Education (FSE) in Tanzania.

ReStatEducationAdministrative data
Metadata matches
Sources
ReStat
Fields
Education
Methods and data
DescriptiveAdministrative data
Abstract

We use administrative data to measure sibling spillovers on academic performance before and after the introduction of Free Secondary Education (FSE) in Tanzania. Prior to FSE, students whose older siblings narrowly passed the secondary school entrance exam were less likely to go to secondary school themselves; with FSE, the effect became positive. A triple-differences analysis, using geographic variation in FSE exposure, shows that FSE caused the reversal. Mechanism analyses suggest that changes in parental investments were a more likely channel for this reversal than direct sibling interactions. By alleviating financial constraints, FSE allowed households to invest in more children.

Source versions
ReStat2026-05-14
The Review of Economics and Statistics:1-51
10.1162/rest.a.1786
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