Olof Aslund, Per-Anders Edin, Peter Fredriksson, Hans Gronqvist
We examine to what extent immigrant school performance is affected by the characteristics of the neighborhoods that they grow up in. We address this issue using a refugee placement policy which provides exogenous variation in the initial place of residence in Sweden.
The main result is that school performance is increasing in the number of highly educated adults sharing the subject�s ethnicity. A standard deviation increase in the fraction of high-educated in the assigned neighborhood raises compulsory school GPA by 0.9 percentile ranks. This magnitude corresponds to a tenth of the performance gap between refugee immigrant and nativeborn children.
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