1 minute read

References

Next Article
References

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 Unpublished manuscript.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.

This article is from: