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Why Don’t Poor Families Move? A Spatial Equilibrium Analysis of Parental Decisions with Social Learning

Suzanne Bellue

No 2024-07, Working Papers from Center for Research in Economics and Statistics

Abstract: In the United States, less-educated parents tend to allocate little time to parentchild activities, reside in disadvantaged neighborhoods, and underestimate the relevance of parental inputs for later outcomes. This paper proposes a social learning mechanism that can lead to socioeconomic differences in parental beliefs and decisions. The key elements are young adults learning through the observations of older people within their neighborhood but being prone to erroneous inferences by imperfectly correcting for selection induced by residential segregation. I incorporate the social learning mechanism in a quantitative spatial and overlapping generations model of human capital accumulation and parental decisions. Once calibrated to the United States, the model accurately captures both targeted and non-targeted parental behavior across socioeconomic groups. It displays relatively modest levels of erroneous beliefs, contributing to a 3% increase in income inequality (measured by the income Gini index) and a 14% reduction in social mobility (measured by the income rank-rank coefficient). Ahousing voucher policy improves the neighborhood quality of eligible families, raising children’s future earnings. When the policy is scaled up, long-run and general equilibrium responses in parental beliefs amplify the effects of the policy, reducing inequality and improving social mobility.

Keywords: Neighborhood; Education; Human Capital; Learning; Social Mobility (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D13 D62 D83 E24 J13 R2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 85 pages
Date: 2024-03-13
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge and nep-ure
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Working Paper: Why Don’t Poor Families Move? A Spatial Equilibirum Analysis of Parental Decisions with Social Learning (2023) Downloads
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