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The Illusion of School Choice: Empirical Evidence from Barcelona

Working Paper 712 | Published October 28, 2014

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Authors

Maia Guell Visiting Scholar, Institute
The Illusion of School Choice: Empirical Evidence from Barcelona

Abstract

The Boston mechanism is a school allocation procedure that is widely used around the world. To resolve overdemands, priority is often given to families who live in the neighborhood school. We note that such priorities define some schools as being safer. We exploit an unexpected change in the definition of neighborhood in Barcelona to show that when allowing school choice under the BM with priorities: (1) the resulting allocation is not very different from a neighborhood-based assignment, and (2) important inequalities emerge beyond parents’ naivete found in the literature.