Search Results

Showing results 1 to 2 of approximately 2.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:McMillan, Lucy 

Working Paper
Job Loss, Credit Card Loans, and the College-persistence Decision of US Working Students

This study assesses the impact of involuntary job loss on college persistence by leveraging different job-loss timings relative to a student’s college enrollment decision. We find that job loss increases the probability that a working college student leaves college before attaining a degree, but access to short-term credit through credit card loans buffers this liquidity effect. By restricting credit supply to college students, the CARD Act of 2009 has inadvertently inhibited the ability of liquidity-constrained students to remain in college when their earnings unexpectedly fall, resulting ...
Working Papers , Paper 23-19

Report
Credit Access and the College-persistence Decision of Working Students: Policy Implications for New England

This study assesses the effects of involuntary job loss and access to credit card loans on working college students’ decision to either remain in school (college persistence) or drop out. The authors conducted the underlying analysis using national data, but their findings are especially relevant to New England, where higher education employs 4 percent of the region’s workforce—more than twice the national average. College persistence therefore carries implications not only for the individual students, but also for the vitality of the region’s labor market.
New England Public Policy Center Research Report , Paper 23-2

FILTER BY Bank

FILTER BY Content Type

Report 1 items

Working Paper 1 items

FILTER BY Author

Wu, Pinghui 2 items

FILTER BY Jel Classification

I22 2 items

I23 2 items

J64 2 items

FILTER BY Keywords

PREVIOUS / NEXT