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Explaining ethnic disparities in bachelor's qualifications: Participation, retention and completion in NZ

Lisa Meehan, Gail Pacheco and Zoe Pushon
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Lisa Meehan: Productivity Commission
Zoe Pushon: Productivity Commission

No 2017/01, Working Papers from New Zealand Productivity Commission

Abstract: There are substantial ethnic gaps in higher education in NZ, despite more than a decade of considerable policy effort aimed at this concern. This study uses newly linked administrative data to examine the underachievement of Māori and Pasifika relative to Europeans. We follow a population cohort born between 1990 and 1994 from school through to young adulthood to assess the relative contributions of prior academic performance, socioeconomic status and parental education to these gaps. Controlling for the relevant covariates narrows the Māori-European gap and completely eliminates the Pasifika-European gap in bachelor's degree participation rates. Utilising Fairlie decompositions, we find that school performance is by far the largest contributor to the ethnic gaps. Low socioeconomic status and parental education are also pertinent, but less important. Our results suggest that ethnic-based policies aimed at encouraging participation are likely to have a limited effect if used in isolation, and signal the need for policy interventions earlier in the education system.

JEL-codes: I21 I24 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017-02
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