Working Paper

How Information Affects Support for Education Spending: Evidence from Survey Experiments in Germany and the United States

Martin R. West, Ludger Wößmann, Philipp Lergetporer, Katharina Werner
CESifo, Munich, 2016

CESifo Working Paper No. 6192

To study whether current spending levels and public knowledge of them contribute to transatlantic differences in policy preferences, we implement parallel survey experiments in Germany and the United States. In both countries, support for increased education spending and teacher salaries falls when respondents receive information about existing levels. Treatment effects vary by prior knowledge in a manner consistent with information effects rather than priming. Support for salary increases is inversely related to salary levels across American states, suggesting that salary differences could explain much of Germans’ lower support for increases. Information about the tradeoffs between specific spending categories shifts preferences from class-size reduction towards alternative purposes.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Economics of Education
Keywords: policy preferences, cross-country comparison, Germany, United States, education spending, information, survey experiments
JEL Classification: H520, I220, D720, D830

 

Also published as: NBER Working Paper 22808, Information