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School Spending and Student Outcomes: Evidence from Revenue Limit Elections in Wisconsin†

School Spending and Student Outcomes: Evidence from Revenue Limit Elections in Wisconsin† AbstractThis study examines the impacts of two distinct types of school spending on student outcomes. State-imposed revenue limits cap the total amount of revenue that a school district in Wisconsin can raise unless the district holds a referendum asking voters to exceed the cap. Importantly, Wisconsin law requires districts to hold separate referenda for operational and capital expenditures, which allows for estimating their independent effects. Leveraging close elections in a dynamic regression discontinuity framework, I find that increases in operational spending have substantial positive effects on test scores, dropout rates, and postsecondary enrollment, but additional capital expenditures have little impact. (JEL D72, H75, I21, I22, I28) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png American Economic Journal: Economic Policy American Economic Association

School Spending and Student Outcomes: Evidence from Revenue Limit Elections in Wisconsin†

School Spending and Student Outcomes: Evidence from Revenue Limit Elections in Wisconsin†

American Economic Journal: Economic Policy , Volume 14 (1) – Feb 1, 2022

Abstract

AbstractThis study examines the impacts of two distinct types of school spending on student outcomes. State-imposed revenue limits cap the total amount of revenue that a school district in Wisconsin can raise unless the district holds a referendum asking voters to exceed the cap. Importantly, Wisconsin law requires districts to hold separate referenda for operational and capital expenditures, which allows for estimating their independent effects. Leveraging close elections in a dynamic regression discontinuity framework, I find that increases in operational spending have substantial positive effects on test scores, dropout rates, and postsecondary enrollment, but additional capital expenditures have little impact. (JEL D72, H75, I21, I22, I28)

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Publisher
American Economic Association
Copyright
Copyright © 2022 © American Economic Association
ISSN
1945-7731
DOI
10.1257/pol.20200226
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThis study examines the impacts of two distinct types of school spending on student outcomes. State-imposed revenue limits cap the total amount of revenue that a school district in Wisconsin can raise unless the district holds a referendum asking voters to exceed the cap. Importantly, Wisconsin law requires districts to hold separate referenda for operational and capital expenditures, which allows for estimating their independent effects. Leveraging close elections in a dynamic regression discontinuity framework, I find that increases in operational spending have substantial positive effects on test scores, dropout rates, and postsecondary enrollment, but additional capital expenditures have little impact. (JEL D72, H75, I21, I22, I28)

Journal

American Economic Journal: Economic PolicyAmerican Economic Association

Published: Feb 1, 2022

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