Many countries have established new local colleges to increase access to education for disadvantaged populations. However, many of these expansions have not reduced educational inequality. Drawing on evidence from a large-scale college expansion initiative, we find that increased college availability did not lead to a differential increase in attendance among students from parents with less education. Rather, the expanded access primarily benefited students with marginal academic ability. These results suggest that higher education enrollment is largely determined by inherent scholastic ability and that the expansion of higher education tends to attract students at the upper margin of this ability distribution.
Working Paper No. 1538
Ability, Not Heritage: Why Expanding University Access Often Fails to Narrow Intergenerational Educational Gaps
Working Paper
Reference
Åstebro, Thomas, Henrik Hällerfors, Andreas Bergh and Joacim Tåg (2025). “Ability, Not Heritage: Why Expanding University Access Often Fails to Narrow Intergenerational Educational Gaps”. IFN Working Paper No. 1538. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Åstebro, Thomas, Henrik Hällerfors, Andreas Bergh and Joacim Tåg (2025). “Ability, Not Heritage: Why Expanding University Access Often Fails to Narrow Intergenerational Educational Gaps”. IFN Working Paper No. 1538. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Authors
Thomas Åstebro, Henrik Hällerfors, Andreas Bergh, Joacim Tåg