Nature versus Nurture in Social Mobility Under Private and Public Education Systems

Author:

Fan Simon1,Pang Yu2,Pestieau Pierre3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, Lingnan University, Hong Kong

2. School of Business, Macau University of Science and Technology, Macau

3. Department of Economics, University of Liège and CORE, Belgium

Abstract

This paper analyzes the roles of innate talent versus family background in shaping intergenerational mobility and social welfare under different education systems. We establish an overlapping-generations model in which the allocation of workforce between a high-paying skilled labor sector and a low-paying unskilled labor sector depends on talent, parental human capital, and educational resources, and the wage rate of skilled workers is governed by their average talent. Our model suggests that under the private education system, income inequality is inversely associated with social mobility, and the steady-state average talent of skilled labor declines as parents increase educational spending. The introduction of public education, which makes the allocation of workforce depend more on talent and less on family background, tends to increase both inequality and mobility and improve welfare under reasonable conditions. Our simulations show that if the government diverts public school funding to redistribution, the economy has lower inequality and mobility in the steady state. Moving from elitist to meritocratic systems yields lower inequality and greater mobility.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Administration,Economics and Econometrics,Finance

Reference43 articles.

1. Education Policy and Intergenerational Transfers in Equilibrium

2. A Theory of Intergenerational Mobility

3. Human Capital and the Rise and Fall of Families

4. Public education and redistribution when talents are mismatched

5. Boadway Robin, Cuff Katherine. 2013. “The Recent Evolution of Tax-transfer Policies.” In Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics, edited by Keith Banting and John Myles, 335–358, Toronto: UBC Press.

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