Working Paper

Inequality, Opting-out and Public Education Funding

Calin Arcalean, Ioana Cosmina Schiopu
CESifo, Munich, 2014

CESifo Working Paper No. 5115

We investigate the relationship between inequality and political support for public education funding in a model of endogenous fertility and school choice. Household income heterogeneity is consistent with the skewness of empirical income distributions. Inequality can drive education spending in opposite directions in poor and rich economies. A mean preserving spread increases tax rates and public school enrollment, but decreases public spending per student in low income economies, while it has opposite effects at high income levels. An increase in the average income level can also have non-monotonic effects.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Public Finance
Keywords: education funding, inequality, political economy
JEL Classification: D720, H420, I210, I220