Education, social security, and growth
Article Abstract:
A study was conducted to analyze the role of government's apportionment of tax revenues between public investment in education and social security benefits to the aged. An overlapping generations economy was utilized as a benchmark model to carry out the analysis. Results indicated that higher investment in education leads to a higher aggregate output in the economy and higher social security benefits.
Publication Name: The Journal of Public Economics
Subject: Government
ISSN: 0047-2727
Year: 1999
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Education, redistributive taxation and confidence
Article Abstract:
A study uses an empirical analysis to know the implications of redistribution taxation on people's attitude towards education.
Publication Name: The Journal of Public Economics
Subject: Government
ISSN: 0047-2727
Year: 2006
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Aging population and education finance
Article Abstract:
Impact of public assistance for aging population on government spending for education is analyzed.
Publication Name: The Journal of Public Economics
Subject: Government
ISSN: 0047-2727
Year: 2004
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Social security and migration with endogenous skill upgrading. The politics of redistributive social insurance
- Abstracts: Randomization in optimal income tax schedules. Privatization and the distribution of income in the commons. Private information, Coasian bargaining, and the second welfare theorem
- Abstracts: Environmental tax reform and endogenous growth. Environmental tax policy and intergenerational distribution. Optimal taxation, public goods and environmental policy with involuntary employment
- Abstracts: Congestion, land use, and job dispersion: a general equilibrium model. Income distribution and the residential density gradient
- Abstracts: A new look at the distributional effects of economic growth during the 1980s: a comparative study of the United States and Germany