I got my Ph.D. in Economics at UC Berkeley under the supervision of David Card. My research interests are in labor and education economics.
Prior to my Ph.D. studies, I worked as a teacher at a high school in Chile and as a full-time lecturer at the University of Chile. I also hold a BA and MA in Economics from Universidad de Chile. For more information, please see my CV here.
I'm starting my work as an Economist at PXT Central Science Team at Amazon in October 2023.
You can contact me at tatiana_reyes@berkeley.edu
Many college admissions systems use a combination of GPA and standardized test scores to determine access to more selective programs. In this paper, I study the impacts of a 2013 reform in the Chilean admission system that sought to increase equity by introducing a third component, based on a student’s GPA relative to the historical average at their high school. Simulating the admission mechanism with and without the relative GPA boost, I classify applicants into three groups: (i) those who gained access to more selective programs (pulled-up), (ii) those who lost access to more selective programs (pushed-down), and (iii) those whose admission was unaffected. Applying the same procedure in earlier years, I identify the same groups, facilitating a difference-in-differences design to estimate the impacts of the 2013 reform on enrollment, persistence, and graduation. Pulled-up students were able to persist in their newly accessed programs, resulting in more selective degree attainment with no effect on overall BA completion. Pushed-down students, who tended to come from better-educated/higher-income families, experienced comparable-sized reductions in the probability of graduating from selective programs, offset by gains in graduation from less selective programs. I conclude that the reform improved equity with little or no loss in efficiency.
The impact of grade retention on juvenile crime
with Juan Diaz, Nicolás Grau, and Jorge Rivera
Economics of Education Review, 2021, 84, 102-153 [ungated]