Public Education Expenditures, Growth and Income Inequality

Public Education Expenditures, Growth and Income Inequality
Author: Lionel Artige
Publisher:
Total Pages: 42
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

Public education is usually seen as having at least two desirable effects: fostering economic growth and reducing income inequality. This paper revisits both relations in a single model of occupational choice with an endogenous supply of teachers. First, we show that the impact of public education expenditures on economic growth depends both on the level of these expenditures and the shape of the human capital distribution. Second, our model shows that the relationship between public education spending and income inequality can be U-shaped. We provide empirical evidence for this U-shaped relationship. Finally, we calibrate our model for 8 OECD countries.

Education and Development

Education and Development
Author: Walter W. McMahon
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2000-01-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 019159119X

This book develops a new approach to measuring the total returns to human resource development through investment in education. Drawing on microanalytic foundations, it uses regional and worldwide data to estimate the net marginal contributions of education and new knowledge both to economic growth and to wider effects on democratization, human rights, political stability, health, net population growth rates, reduction of poverty, inequality in income distribution, crime, drug use, and the environment. The total impact of education policy changes on endogenous development is then estimated using an interactive model. This new approach is important to industrialized and developing countries alike. The diffusion of knowledge and the adaptation of new techniques has been identified as crucial to the growth process in the new endogenmous growth models, and is of increasing strategic importance in current knowledge-based globalizing economies. Similarly, the non-monetary returns from education are important in improving human welfare. Measurement of these non-market returns is a crucial but much neglected subject. It has proved frustrating, and existing microanalytic measures have proved piecemeal. The new approach developed here offers some comprehensive estimates and simulation techniques for finding more cost-effective policies, and also suggests new hypotheses for further microanalytic testing.

The Economics of Screening and Risk Sharing in Higher Education

The Economics of Screening and Risk Sharing in Higher Education
Author: Bernhard Eckwert
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2015-05-14
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0128031913

The Economics of Screening and Risk Sharing in Higher Education explores advances in information technologies and in statistical and social sciences that have significantly improved the reliability of techniques for screening large populations. These advances are important for higher education worldwide because they affect many of the mechanisms commonly used for rationing the available supply of educational services. Using a single framework to study several independent questions, the authors provide a comprehensive theory in an empirically-driven field. Their answers to questions about funding structures for investments in higher education, students’ attitudes towards risk, and the availability of arrangements for sharing individual talent risks are important for understanding the theoretical underpinnings of information and uncertainty on human capital formation. Investigates conditions under which better screening leads to desirable outcomes such as higher human capital accumulation, less income inequality, and higher economic well-being. Questions how the role of screening relates to the funding structure for investments in higher education and to the availability of risk sharing arrangements for individual talent risks. Reveals government policies that are suited for controlling or counteracting detrimental side effects along the growth path.

Income Inequality and Education Revisited

Income Inequality and Education Revisited
Author: Mr.David Coady
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 23
Release: 2017-05-26
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1484302133

This paper presents new results on the relationship between education expansion and income inequality. While human capital theory suggests that income inequality increases with inequality of education outcomes, the expected relationship between income inequality and the level of education is ambiguous. Consistent with these theoretical priors, when dynamic panel estimation techniques are used to address issues of persistence and endogeneity we find a large, positive, statistically significant and stable relationship between education inequality and income inequality, especially in emerging and developing economies and among older age cohorts. The relationship between income inequality and education levels is positive but small and not always statistically significant, but we find a statistically significant negative relationship with schooling levels of younger cohorts. Statistical tests indicate that our dynamic estimators are consistent and that our identifying instruments are valid. Policy simulations suggest that education expansion will continue to be inequality reducing but that this role will diminish as countries develop.

Educational Choice and Economic Activity

Educational Choice and Economic Activity
Author: Jeffrey W. Ward
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021
Genre: Economics
ISBN:

The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the effects of fiscal policy rules for funding higher education on macroeconomic concerns. Alternative government funding policies impact an endogenous household decision over post-secondary higher education and subsequently, economic output, growth, and income distribution. The link between human capital and economic growth is well documented. This work gathers many disparate ideas about how human capital is formed and its use in improving labor productivity and expansion of the variety of goods produced through research and development. The models employ a multi-period overlapping generations framework. In the initial period, workers sort themselves through educational choice into three skill groups: low-skill(no college education), medium-skill (college degree in non-R & D curricula), and high-skill (college degree in R & D). The high-skill group performs research and development. Newly minted products must pass through an adoption process before becoming usable. The low and medium-skill groups are imperfect substitutes in the production of intermediate goods. Final goods are produced by combining adopted technologies and intermediate goods. The second chapter of this dissertation considers a household with full risk-sharing. The third chapter divides the household by skill type, such that they no longer pool resources. However, this model employs a Negishi-weighted social welfare function whereby the marginal utilities of the groups are impacted by aggregate conditions. The steady-state growth models in these two chapters are calibrated to match wage premium data, savings rate data by age, 2% annual economic growth, and data for total money income over the life-cycle. The results of comparative statics exercises in both versions of the model show the impact of alternative funding regimes. Funding high-skilled education improves growth at the ex-pense of lower level effects on output; however, funding medium-skilled education, while having only modest effects of growth, substantially increases output. The fourth chapter seeks to per-form dynamic simulations of these models to explore the business cycle properties and transitional dynamics associated with educational choice and changes to higher education funding

Handbook of the Economics of Education

Handbook of the Economics of Education
Author: Stephen J. Machin
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 707
Release: 2011-08-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 044453444X

With contributions from leading researchers, this handbook presents an accurate, self-contained survey of the current state of the economics of education. It summarises the most recent discussions in journals and elucidates new developments.

Credit Markets with Differences in Abilities

Credit Markets with Differences in Abilities
Author: Mr.Se-Jik Kim
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 36
Release: 1994-04-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1451972962

This paper addresses the growth, welfare, and distributional effects of credit markets. We construct a general equilibrium model where human capital is the engine of growth and individuals differ in their education abilities. We argue that the existence of credit markets encourages specialization, by which individuals choose during their youth to work or to receive formal education. This specialization unambiguously increases growth and welfare. The model also shows that in economies with high (low) average level of education abilities, the opening of credit markets induces a more disperse (equal) income distribution.

Education and Its Relation to Economic Growth, Poverty, and Income Distribution

Education and Its Relation to Economic Growth, Poverty, and Income Distribution
Author: Jandhyala B. G. Tilak
Publisher:
Total Pages: 134
Release: 1989
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

This paper presents an extensive survey of empirical research evidence on the role of education in economic growth, poverty and income distribution. The author presents new analysis of more recent cross nation data on education and income distribution. The analysis uses lagged variables on education which reconfirms some of the well established theses on the role of education in improving income distribution. It also indicates that with significant improvements in educational levels, the threshold level of education to significantly contribute to income distribution could change from primary to secondary education. The author also questions some of the doubts expressed by critics in this context and reasserts that, on the whole, education is an important policy instrument that can be looked upon with hope towards improving inequities.