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Research ArticleArticle

Born Under a Lucky Star: Financial Aid, College Completion, Labor Supply, and Credit Constraints

Jeffrey T. Denning
Published online before print March 02, 2018, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/jhr.54.3.1116.8359R1
Jeffrey T. Denning
Jeffrey T. Denning is an assistant professor of economics at Brigham Young University and a Research Affiliate at IZA
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Abstract

Financial aid can affect both college enrollment and graduation. The effects on graduation can be driven either by students induced to enroll by financial aid, students who would have enrolled anyway but graduate as a result of the financial aid, or both. This paper isolates the effect of financial aid on the second group by examining a change in aid that did not change enrollment. I study a discontinuous change in the amount of aid available to students who meet the age cutoff for financial independence I find that additional aid causes some university seniors to graduate one year earlier.

JEL Codes
  • I22
  • I28

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Journal of Human Resources: 60 (3)
Journal of Human Resources
Vol. 60, Issue 3
1 May 2025
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Born Under a Lucky Star: Financial Aid, College Completion, Labor Supply, and Credit Constraints
Jeffrey T. Denning
Journal of Human Resources Mar 2018, DOI: 10.3368/jhr.54.3.1116.8359R1

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Born Under a Lucky Star: Financial Aid, College Completion, Labor Supply, and Credit Constraints
Jeffrey T. Denning
Journal of Human Resources Mar 2018, DOI: 10.3368/jhr.54.3.1116.8359R1
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Keywords

  • I22
  • I28
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