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Income Inequality, the Median Voter, and the Support for Public Education
Author(s) -
Sean Corcoran,
W. Randy Evans
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
microeconomics: welfare economics and collective decision-making ejournal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w16097
Subject(s) - inequality , median income , economic inequality , low income , economics , voter model , demographic economics , public economics , sociology , mathematics , statistics , demography , mathematical analysis , population
Using a panel of U.S. school districts spanning 1970 - 2000, we examine the relationship between income inequality and fiscal support for public education. In contrast with recent theoretical and empirical work suggesting a negative relationship between inequality and public spending, we find results consistent with a median voter model, in which inequality that reduces the median voter's tax share induces higher local spending on public education. We estimate that 12 to 22 percent of the increase in local school spending over this period is attributable to rising inequality.

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