Patterns, Trends and Policy Implications of Private Spending on Skills Development in Mexico and the United States

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Date issued
March 2017
Subject
Education Expenditure;
Household Expenditure;
School Attendance;
Children;
Private Investment;
High School;
Household Income;
Labor Market;
Higher Education;
Education Enrollment
JEL code
D11 - Consumer Economics: Theory;
I2 - Education and Research Institutions;
J21 - Labor Force and Employment, Size, and Structure
Country
Mexico;
United States
Category
Working Papers
This paper explores families' investment in skills development through education in a high-inequality, low-education quality country such as Mexico, comparing it to a lower-inequality, higher-quality education country such as the United States. The paper uses a series of high-quality Household Income and Expenditure Surveys for both countries spanning around 20 years and different methodological approaches. Of particular interest is the analysis of education expenditure patterns along the income distribution. Policy implications for both cases are discussed. While in Mexico stimulating private spending in education through public resources might be regressive, the opposite might be the case in the United States.
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