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Discrimination in marketized welfare services: a field experiment on Swedish schools

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2022

Jonas Larsson Taghizadeh*
Affiliation:
Department of Government, Uppsala University, Box 514, Uppsala 751 20, Sweden
Per Adman
Affiliation:
Department of Government, Uppsala University, Box 514, Uppsala 751 20, Sweden
*
*Corresponding author, email: Jonas.larsson@statsvet.uu.se
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Abstract

Providers’ tendency to cream skim clients according to certain sociodemographic traits is widely believed to increase under marketization, and therefore also discrimination. However, due to a lack of experimental research, little is known about the presence of discrimination in marketized welfare services and of the potential drivers of such biased treatment. The lack of research is particularly evident in regard to socioeconomic status (SES) discrimination and publicly financed for-profit providers. Moreover, competition, an important aspect of marketization, has not been investigated. Focusing on the interesting case of the Swedish school sector, we aim to improve knowledge on these matters. In a field experiment, 3,430 elementary school principals were randomly contacted though e-mail by parents with Arabic- or Swedish-sounding names and in low- or high-socioeconomic professions. The fictional parents were interested in placing their children at the school. The Swedish school sector resembles marketized public services in several Western countries. The results show clear signs of ethnic as well as SES discrimination, particularly in regard to more qualitative aspects of the replies. However, we find no significant differences in discrimination between public and private/for-profit schools and depending on the degree of competition in the school market.

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Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Table 1. Our treatments

Figure 1

Figure 1. The letter sent to the school principals.

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Table 2. Measures of discrimination

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Table 3. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name, having a low-SES profession and being a woman

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Table 4. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name and having a low-SES profession, by level of school competition in the municipality (HHI)

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Table 5. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name, by school type (private/for-profit school vs. a public school)

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Table 6. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having a low SES profession, by school type (private/for-profit school vs. a public school)

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Table 7. Balance between the different treatment groups in the dataset, for school and municipal level variables (means)

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Table 8. Results from our study where upper secondary school administrators rated names on a 100-point scale on income/education

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Figure 2. The original letters in Swedish.

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Table 9. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic/Swedish-sounding name, a low/high-SES profession and being a woman, depending on school type (public or private)

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Table 10. Treatment effects on the four friendliness measures included in the friendliness index of having a low/high-SES profession, an Arabic/Swedish-sounding name and being a woman

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Table 11. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic/Swedish-sounding name and a low/high-SES profession, by private school market share in the municipality

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Table 12. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name, having a low-SES profession and being a woman, after controlling for school type and competition

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Table 13. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic/Swedish-sounding name by school type (private/for-profit school vs. a public school), controlling for student composition and test scores

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Table 14. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an a low/high-SES profession by school type (private/for-profit school vs. a public school), controlling for student composition and test scores

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Table 15. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name and having a low-SES profession by level of school competition in the municipality (HHI), controlling for student composition and test scores

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Table 16. Treatment effects on five discrimination outcomes of having an Arabic-sounding name and having a low-SES profession by level of school competition in the municipality (HHI), without controls

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Figure 3. Two examples of email replies from the school principals.

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Table 17. School composition and test results depending on school ownership