The Importance Of Place: Effects Of Community Job Loss On College Enrollment And Attainment Across Rural And Metropolitan Regions

AERA OPEN(2021)

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Abstract
Youth living in remote rural communities face significant geographic barriers to college access. Even those living near to a postsecondary institution may not have the means for, or may not see the value of, pursuing a college degree within their local economy. This study uses 18 years of national county-level data to ask how local economic shocks affect the postsecondary enrollment and attainment of rural students, as compared to students in metropolitan and metropolitan-adjacent regions. Results from an instrumental variables analysis indicate that each 1 percentage point increase in local unemployment increases local college enrollment by 10.0% in remote rural areas, as compared to a 5.2% increase in metropolitan-adjacent areas and no detectable increase in metropolitan areas. The rise in rural college enrollment is driven primarily by students enrolling in or continuing in associate degree programs, and by students transferring from 2-year to 4-year programs.
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Key words
community colleges, econometric analysis, economics of education, postsecondary education, quasi-experimental analysis, regression analyses, rural education
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