Discussion paper

DP18886 School choice and neighborhood sorting: Equilibrium consequences of geographic school admissions

Geographic school admissions criteria bind residential and school choices for some parents, and could create externalities in equilibrium for non-parents through displacement or higher rent. Through a dynamic structural model, we show that the policy decision of geographic versus non-geographic school admissions criteria has important implications for equilibrium outcomes in school and housing markets. Geographic admissions criteria segregate schools, but integrate neighborhoods according to income. Incorporating non-parents into the model challenges the existing understanding of how public schools affect the housing market: non-parent households dampen the equilibrium price premium around popular schools; non-parent households are never better off under geographic admissions.

£6.00
Citation

Greaves, E and H Turon (2024), ‘DP18886 School choice and neighborhood sorting: Equilibrium consequences of geographic school admissions‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 18886. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp18886