Title: Economics 147
1Economics 147
2Outline for today
- The Tiebout model and traditional school choice
- How it fits into the course
- Arguments for and against centralization of
education - The model
- Assumptions
- Policy implications
3Where are we in the course?
- Started with human capital investment problem
- Expand it to allow possible return to schooling
from signaling - Allow school quality to matter in determining
return to education - Education production functions
- Public vs. private
- Class size, peers
4Theme throughout
- Must identify causal effects of schooling (or
particular quality component) - Remember that people choose quantity/quality of
schooling - These choices may be influenced by omitted
variables
5Economic framework
- Optimal investment decision demand for
education - Education production function supply of
education - Next markets for education
6What level of government should provide education?
- Why should government provide education at all?
- Credit market failures
- Externalities
- Given government provision, how centralized
should it be? - Most centralized ? most
decentralized - Federal ? State ? County ?
Community
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8Unfunded mandates
- Do not show up in intergovernmental revenues and
expenditures - 1970s federal deficit ? federal govt passed on
responsibilities to the states - Late 1980s, states entered fiscal crises, passed
on responsibilities to localities
9Arguments for centralized provision of government
services
- Efficiency arguments
- Economies of scale
- Spillovers across jurisdictions
- Equity arguments
- Greater capacity to redistribute
10Arguments against centralized provision of
government services
- Efficiency arguments
- Match individual preferences more closely
- Promote competition in provision of the good
- Matters if you are worried about bureaucrats
trying to maximize their budgets - Diseconomies of scale
- Equity arguments
- Hard to make
11Tiebout (1956) model of local provision
- Starting point people understate their
preferences for government spending (G) if they
will be taxed accordingly (free-rider problem) - Tiebouts insight dont ask people how much G
want, make them reveal it through where they
choose to live - Different communities offer different levels of G
and different tax rates - Individuals vote with their feet
- Eliminates ability to free ride ? improves
efficiency
12Tiebout hypothesis
- Public goods provision will be efficient at the
local level (under many assumptions)
13Model
- Many individuals divide themselves into different
local jurisdictions (towns) - Each town has N residents
- Private good x (px1)
- Public good G (pG1)
- Within a town, residents are identical
- Indiv preferences given by U(x,G)
- Indiv budget constraint
- x G/N y
14Tiebout makes strong assumptions
- Need a competitive market
- Consumers are fully mobile
- no moving costs
- Consumers are fully informed
- perfect information on govt services and taxes
- Unlimited number of communities exist
- at least as many as types of people
15Assumptions about production function
- No externalities or spillovers across communities
- Positive externalities make local residents
supply G at an inefficiently low level - Negative externalities (like pollution) make
local residents supply G at an inefficiently high
level - Constant marginal costs
16Assumptions about financing
- Need these assumptions to prevent free riding
- Must do one of these
- Assume a head tax (same level of tax for
everyone) - Assume a property tax based on home value and
assume zoning
17Are competitive market assumptions realistic?
- Consumers are fully mobile
- US Census 16 of Americans have a different
address in a given year than they did the year
before - Moving costs have declined over time but are
still sizable, especially non-monetary costs - Consumers have perfect information on govt
services and taxes - Blinder Krueger evidence on federal level next
- At least as many communities as types of
individuals - Varies by metropolitan area
- One school district per 36,025 people in CA
- One school district per 14,302 people in NJ
- One school district per 254,016 people in FL
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19Source Blinder Krueger
20Are production function assumptions realistic?
- No externalities or spillovers across communities
- Low level of environmental regulation/enforcement
in Mexico affects Imperial Beach (CA) water
quality - State-subsidized UC education benefits other
states - Constant marginal costs
- Depends on the good being provided
21Are financing assumptions realistic?
- Must do one of these
- Assume a head tax (same level of tax for
everyone) - - unrealistic
- Assume a property tax based on home value and
assume zoning - - we see this in reality
22Why zoning?
- Property tax is applied to the value of the house
- You can free ride by buying a small house in a
rich neighborhood - You benefit from your neighbors high tax
payments on fancy houses but pay little yourself - Rich want to keep the poor out of their
neighborhoods to prevent this free riding - Zoning is a way to do this
23Example Lincoln, MA original zoning law
24Characteristics of (our stylized) equilibrium
- HHs set MB of school quality MC
- Households sort themselves into communities by
preference for school quality - House prices capitalize differences in school
quality - Producers of schooling produce efficiently