Distributional Effects of Educational Improvements: Are We Using The Wrong Model? PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download Distributional Effects of Educational Improvements: Are We Using The Wrong Model? PDF full book. Access full book title Distributional Effects of Educational Improvements: Are We Using The Wrong Model? by Francois Bourguignon. Download full books in PDF and EPUB format.

Distributional Effects of Educational Improvements: Are We Using The Wrong Model?

Distributional Effects of Educational Improvements: Are We Using The Wrong Model? PDF Author: Francois Bourguignon
Publisher: World Bank Publications
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 21

Book Description
Measuring the incidence of public spending in education requires an intergenerational framework distinguishing between what current and future generations - that is, parents and children - give and receive. In standard distributional incidence analysis, households are assumed to receive a benefit equal to what is spent on their children enrolled in the public schooling system and, implicitly, to pay a fee proportional to their income. This paper shows that, in an intergenerational framework, this is equivalent to assuming perfectly altruistic individuals, in the sense of the dynastic model, and perfect capital markets. But in practice, credit markets are imperfect and poor households cannot borrow against the future income of their children. The authors show that under such circumstances, standard distributional incidence analysis may greatly over-estimate the progressivity of public spending in education: educational improvements that are progressive in the long-run steady state may actually be regressive for the current generation of poor adults. This is especially true where service delivery in education is highly inefficient - as it is in poor districts of many developing countries - so that the educational benefits received are relatively low in comparison with the cost of public spending. The results have implications for both policy measures and analytical approaches.