802. Can school centralisation foster human capital accumulation? A quasi-experiment from early XX century Italy

Working paper N. 802 Marzo 2019

Gabriele Cappelli

DEPS, USiena

MIchelangelo Vasta

DEPS, USiena

Abstract

This paper shows that a shift towards a more centralized school system can benefit countries characterized by poor levels of human capital and large regional disparities in education. In 1911, Italy moved from a fully decentralized primary-school system towards centralisation through the Daneo-Credaro Reform. The Reform design allows us to compare treated municipalities with provincial and district capitals, which retained school autonomy. Our quasi-experiment, based on Propensity Score Matching (PSM), shows that centralisation substantially increased the pace of human capital accumulation. Treated municipalities were characterized by a 0.43 percentage-point premium on the average annual growth of literacy between 1911 and 1921. We discuss some of the channels through which the new legislation affected primary schooling and literacy, with important implications for long-term economic growth.

Keywords

Human capital, school management, public policy, decentralisation, centralisation, Italy

Jel Codes

N33, N34, I21