Home
Scholarly Works
Public Education Inequality and Intergenerational...
Journal article

Public Education Inequality and Intergenerational Mobility

Abstract

Public school funding depends heavily on local property tax revenue. Consequently, low-income households have limited access to quality education in neighborhoods with high house prices. In a dynamic life-cycle model with neighborhood choice and endogenous local school quality, we show that this property tax funding mechanism reduces intergenerational mobility and accounts for the spatial correlation between house prices and mobility. A housing voucher experiment improves access to schools, with benefits that can last for multiple generations. Additionally, a policy that redistributes property tax revenues equally across schools improves mobility and welfare. However, the benefits can take generations to be realized. (JEL H71, H75, I21, I22, J62, R23, R31)

Authors

Zheng A; Graham J

Journal

American Economic Journal Macroeconomics, Vol. 14, No. 3, pp. 250–282

Publisher

American Economic Association

Publication Date

July 1, 2022

DOI

10.1257/mac.20180466

ISSN

1945-7707

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

Contact the Experts team