Transparency and Percent Plans (Kapor 2025) | FT50 ECTA

07/12/2025 1h 0min Temporada 1

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Episode Synopsis

English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:13:18Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:31:08German Podcast Starts at 00:44:42ReferenceKapor, A. (2025), Transparency and Percent Plans. Econometrica, 93: 2123-2157. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA18385‌Youtube Channel⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠Connect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/Welcome to 🎙️ Revise and Resubmit! Today’s episode dives into fresh, high powered work from one of the most prestigious journals in economics, Econometrica, a flagship outlet on the FT50 journal list. 📈📚The paper on the table is “Transparency and Percent Plans” by Adam Kapor, published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Econometric Society and released online on 27 November 2025. ✨ This is not just another admissions paper; it is a careful, data rich look at how rules we can see shape who dares to apply, who gets in, and who thrives once they walk onto a flagship campus.Kapor zooms in on Texas’ famous Top Ten Percent Plan, where students at the top of their high school class are guaranteed a seat at a flagship university. 🎓⭐ The twist is not just the rule itself, but its transparency. When the admission game becomes clearer, uncertainty shrinks, and suddenly students who might have quietly opted out start to see themselves as contenders. Using survey data, administrative records, and a structural model, the paper shows that about two thirds of the plan’s big boost in flagship attendance for top decile students comes from information effects rather than the mechanical guarantee alone. That is huge. That is policy as a spotlight, not just a sorting hat.What is even more striking is who steps into that spotlight. The students pulled in by transparency are more likely to come from low income high schools, and once they enroll, they do not just keep up; they outperform the students they displace in grades, persistence, and even in choosing demanding paths like STEM majors. 🌟🔬 The paper also suggests that the gains could be even larger if transparent admissions rules were paired with equally clear financial aid information, reinforcing the idea that clarity can be a quiet engine of equity.So in this episode, we are going to ask:👉 If making the rules visible can reshape who applies, who enrolls, and who excels, what else in higher education might change if we treated transparency not as a constraint, but as a powerful policy tool? 🤔🎓Huge thanks to Adam Kapor and to John Wiley & Sons Ltd and The Econometric Society for this important contribution in such a prestigious FT50 journal. 🙏📄If you enjoy these deep dives into cutting edge research, make sure you subscribe to “Revise and Resubmit” on Spotify, check out the YouTube channel “Weekend Researcher” 🎧📺, and remember that the podcast is also available on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast so you can listen wherever ideas keep you company. 🌍✨

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