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Christopher Taber - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the eect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the eect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents'assets. We …nd that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints is at most borderline signi…cant. Based on a simple structural model, borrowing constraints deter college enrollment only to a minor extent. This is, however, in large due to subsidies already being substantial.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    NBER Chapters, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.(This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.

Helena Skyt Nielsen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the eect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the eect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents'assets. We …nd that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints is at most borderline signi…cant. Based on a simple structural model, borrowing constraints deter college enrollment only to a minor extent. This is, however, in large due to subsidies already being substantial.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    NBER Chapters, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.(This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.

Torben Sorensen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the eect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the eect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents'assets. We …nd that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints is at most borderline signi…cant. Based on a simple structural model, borrowing constraints deter college enrollment only to a minor extent. This is, however, in large due to subsidies already being substantial.

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    NBER Chapters, 2010
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.(This abstract was borrowed from another version of this item.)

  • estimating the effect of student aid on college enrollment evidence from a Government Grant policy reform
    National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
    Co-Authors: Helena Skyt Nielsen, Torben Sorensen, Christopher Taber
    Abstract:

    In this paper, we investigate the responsiveness of the demand for college to changes in student aid arising from a Danish reform. We separately identify the effect of aid from that of other observed and unobserved variables such as parental income. We exploit the combination of a kinked aid scheme and a reform of the student aid scheme to identify the effect of direct costs on college enrollment. To allow for heterogeneous responses due to borrowing constraints, we use detailed information on parents' assets. We find that enrollment is less responsive than found in other studies and that the presence of borrowing constraints only deters college enrollment to a minor extent.

J G Muga - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • s matrix pole symmetries for non hermitian scattering hamiltonians
    Physical Review A, 2019
    Co-Authors: M A Simon, A Buendia, A Kiely, Ali Mostafazadeh, J G Muga
    Abstract:

    Eusko Jaurlaritza (Basque Country Government (Grant No. IT986-16)); Ministerio de Economia, Industria y Competitividad, Gobierno de Espana (MINECO/FEDER,UE (Grant No. FIS2015-67161-P)); Turkiye Bilimler Akademisi (Turkish Academy of Sciences (Turkiye Bilimler Akademisi) through its membership Grant)

  • energy consumption for ion transport in a segmented paul trap
    New Journal of Physics, 2018
    Co-Authors: A Tobalina, J Alonso, J G Muga
    Abstract:

    We thank Kihwan Kim for discussions. Weacknowledge funding by the Basque Government (Grant No. IT98616) and MINECO/FEDER, UE (Grant No. FIS2015-67161-P). The research is based upon work supported by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA), via the U.S. Army Research Office Grant W911NF-16-1-0070. The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the ODNI, IARPA, or the US Government. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the US Army Research Office.

David M Van Slyke - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • the influence of administrative cost ratios on state Government Grant allocations to nonprofits
    Public Administration Review, 2012
    Co-Authors: Shena Ashley, David M Van Slyke
    Abstract:

    Government has come to rely on nonprofit organizations to deliver publicly funded human and cultural services, and it has become a significant donor to the nonprofit sector. When Government agencies make Grants to nonprofit organizations, administrative cost ratios are often requested, but it is not clear whether or how these ratios influence allocation decisions. Theoretical perspectives alternatively frame the administrative cost ratio as an indicator of price, with negative effects on allocations, or as an indicator of quality, with positive effects on allocations. The authors test these hypotheses using original state-level Grants data from the state of Georgia. The results offer inconclusive evidence about whether the price or quality hypothesis explains Government's use of administrative cost ratios in decisions regarding the amount of Grant allocations. What drives Government Grant-making decisions remains an open and more complex question that involves a range of other variables that are independent of price and quality. The authors address this question in terms of policy and management implications and a future research agenda.