Tuition Fees and Educational Attainment

Jan Bietenbeck, Jan Marcus, Felix Weinhardt

Research output: Working paper/PreprintWorking paper

Abstract

Following a landmark ruling by the Constitutional Court in 2005, more than half of Germany’s universities started charging tuition fees, which also applied to incumbent students. We exploit this unusual lack of grandfathering together with register data covering the universe of students to show that tuition fees increased degree completion among incumbent students. Investigating mechanisms, we do not find that educational quality changed but that incumbent students raised their study effort. In line with previous international evidence, we also find that tuition fees decreased university enrollment among high school graduates. Combining our results, we show that tuition fees did not change overall educational attainment much because the positive effect on degree completion offset the negative effect on enrollment. We conclude by discussing policies to increase overall attainment, which take into account the opposing effects of fees around
the zero-price margin.
Original languageEnglish
Pages1-62
Publication statusPublished - 2020 Sept

Publication series

NameDISCUSSION PAPER SERIES
PublisherIZA Institute of labor economics
Volume13709

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Economics

Free keywords

  • I23
  • I22
  • I28
  • tuition fees
  • higher education

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