
1 minute read
References
8. Similarly, firm entry and exit in a given industry are positively correlated (Dunne,
Roberts, and Samuelson 1988). 9. The share of small municipalities covered by SENA rose between 2003 and 2012 until reaching a peak of 56 percent and quickly declined in the following years as many programs were closed.
References
Bailey, T., S. Jaggars, and D. Jenkins. 2015. Redesigning America’s Community Colleges:
A Clearer Path to Student Success. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Carranza, J. E., and M. M. Ferreyra. 2019. “Increasing Higher Education Coverage: Supply
Expansion and Student Sorting in Colombia.” Journal of Human Capital 13 (1). Carranza, J. E., M. M. Ferreyra, A. Gazmuri, and A. Franco. 2021. “The Supply Side of
Short-Cycle Higher Education Programs.” Unpublished manuscript. World Bank,
Washington, DC. Cellini, S. R. 2009. “Crowded Colleges and College Crowd-Out: The Impact of Public
Subsidies on the Two-Year College Market.” American Economic Journal: Economic
Policy 1 (2): 1–30. Cellini, S. R. 2010. “Financial Aid and For-Profit Colleges: Does Aid Encourage Entry?”
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 29 (3): 526–52. Dunne, T., M. J. Roberts, and L. Samuelson. 1988. “Patterns of Firm Entry and Exit in US
Manufacturing Industries.” The RAND Journal of Economics 19 (4): 495–515. Ferreyra, M., C. Avitabile, J. Botero, F. Haimovich, and S. Urzúa. 2017. At a Crossroads:
Higher Education in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington, DC: World Bank
Group. Grosz, M. 2019. Do Postsecondary Training Programs Respond to Changes in the Labor
Market?” FTC Bureau of Economics Working Paper 34, Federal Trade Commission,
Washington, DC.