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The negative effect of NCAA football bowl bans on university enrolment and applications

Austin F. Eggers, Peter Groothuis, Parker Redding, Kurt W. Rotthoff and Michael Solimini

Applied Economics, 2019, vol. 51, issue 54, 5870-5877

Abstract: Universities provide consumption amenities to students in addition to their educational services. Collegiate sports programs have been characterized as one of these consumption amenities. Previous research has shown that athletic success has a positive impact on both the quantity and quality of students attending a university. Alternatively, we analyse if athletic malfeasance, as measured by NCAA postseason bans of football programs, negatively affects either the quantity or quality of student applications or enrolment. Our findings suggest that athletic malfeasance that results in a postseason football bowl ban lowers the quantity of applications, admittances and enrolment to a university. In addition, we find that universities respond to decreased application numbers by increasing their admission rates, while students who are admitted to the school enrol at the same rate as before the ban. Thus, the reduced enrolment is the result of a smaller applicant pool and not the result of a lower rate of enrolment. Lastly, we do not detect any reduction in student quality at the sanctioned university. Our results demonstrate that impropriety by an athletics program directly impacts a university’s non-athlete student enrolment by influencing the amenity mix provided by the university.

Date: 2019
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Working Paper: The Negative Effect of NCAA Football Bowl Bans on University Enrollment and Applications (2018) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2019.1630708

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