Publication:
Redistribution through education and other transfer mechanisms

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Hanushek, Eric A.
Leung, Charles Ka Yui

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Abstract

Educational subsidies are frequently justified as a method of altering the income distribution. It is thus natural to compare education to other tax-transfer schemes designed to achieve distributional objectives. While equity-efficiency trade-offs are frequently discussed, they are rarely explicitly treated. This paper creates a general equilibrium model of school attendance, labor supply, wage determination, and aggregate production, which is used to compare alternative redistribution devices in terms of both deadweight loss and distributional outcomes. A wage subsidy generally dominates tuition subsidies across a wide range of fundamental parameters for the economy. Both are generally superior to a negative income tax. With externalities in production, however, there is an unambiguous role for governmental subsidy of education, because it both raises GDP and creates a more equal income distribution.

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Elsevier

Subject

Business enterprises, Finance, Economics

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Journal of Monetary Economics

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DOI

10.1016/j.jmoneco.2003.01.004

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