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Post-Katrina New Orleans: Inequality and Schooling

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Title: Post-Katrina New Orleans: Inequality and Schooling


1
Post-Katrina New Orleans Inequality and Schooling
  • S. Barbieri J. Edwards
  • Tulane University

New Orleans Political Economy Workshop Tulane
University September 2010
2
Introduction
  • We study the characteristic of post-Katrina New
    Orleans
  • Assumption New New Orleanians will be mostly
    Old New Orleanians
  • Focus two salient characteristics of Old New
    Orleans
  • Income Inequality
  • Dual school systems

3
Introduction
  • Inequality
  • Substantial fraction of the population is
    marginal
  • Marked differences between very poor unskilled,
    and very rich skilled
  • Gini coefficient at the level of Nairobi, Buenos
    Aires, Santiago (above 0.5)
  • School systems
  • Extremely poor performing public schools
  • Extensive private school system
  • Class and race segregation

4
Introduction
  • First, we build a descriptive model
  • Components
  • Standard General Equilibrium
  • School choice
  • Location decision
  • Political determination of public services
    (education) and taxation

5
Introduction
  • Apply Katrina We collapse its effects into
    better outside opportunity.
  • Questions Predictions Interpretation
  • Who returns? Are they better-off?
  • Composition of population?
  • After-storm income distribution?
  • New level of public services (education)?

6
Introduction
  • Results
  • Among skilled agents, only relatively
    rich/productive agents return. Nonetheless, they
    are worse-off.
  • The composition of population tilts towards a
    more skill-intensive city.
  • The after-storm income distribution is likely to
    be more equal.
  • - Composition effect
  • - Price effect better compensation for
    returning unskilled workers
  • Public services (education) improve.

7
Introduction
  • Main reason behavior of unskilled agents
  • Market forces are already compressing them as
    much as possible. It turns out this makes them
    crucial
  • They cannot absorb the adverse consequences of
    Katrina
  • They return in smaller numbers than skilled
    agents
  • Those that return receive a better pay
  • It becomes in the interest of skilled agents to
    provide better education, to reduce this
    extra-pay

8
Model Description
  • Agents and preferences
  • Common log-utility
  • 2 types of agents Ns skilled, Nu unskilled
  • 2 goods
  • Good 1 - Skilled agent j endowment e(j) New
    Orleans specific.
  • e is decreasing, and e(0) is very large
  • Good 2 - Any unskilled agents endowm. 1

9
Skilled Agents Endowment Distribution
Endowment
1
Population of skilled agents
10
Model Description
  • School Choice
  • The consumption of schooling enters the utility
    function as any other good
  • Agents have two possible choices
  • Public school fixed level gm for free. No
    possibility to supplement.
  • Private provision any level, at the cost of one
    unit of good 1 for any unit of g.

11
Model Description
  • Location Decision
  • Skilled agents earn a reservation utility of log
    Rs if they leave the city
  • Unskilled agents earn a reservation utility equal
    to log Ru if they leave the city

12
Model Description
  • Policy
  • Education financed with budget-balancing
    proportional tax t on skilled agents endowment
  • Public education level gm is chosen through the
    political process, taking into account all
    possible repercussions on prices, population, etc.

13
Equilibrium Definition
  • Standard competitive framework
  • agents maximize utility, given P, the price of
    good 2 (unskilled) in terms of good 1
  • Markets clear, given populations Ns and Nu
  • Location
  • given P and gm, no agent moves in or out of the
    city

14
Equilibrium Definition
  • Policy
  • Given education choices, taxes balance the budget
  • Fully anticipating all migration and general
    equilibrium effects, gm is a Condorcet winner
  • Consequence only skilled agents matter in the
    determination of gm, unskilled agents are always
    indifferent, so they do not vote.

15
Equilibrium Characterization
  • A unique equilibrium where all skilled
    (unskilled) agents opt for private (public)
    school exists if the outside utility of skilled
    agents is sufficiently large with respect to the
    one of unskilled agents.

16
Characterization (formal)
  • Tot. endowm. goods 1 and 2 E1 and E2
  • Then

17
Characterization (informal)
  • Economic variables
  • The price of the good provided by the unskilled
    agents, P, is
  • Increasing in the ratio of total skilled
    endowment/total unskilled endowment
  • Decreasing in the level of public education
    provided

18
Characterization (informal)
  • Population variables
  • Both the skilled and unskilled populations are
    decreasing in the outside opportunities
  • All unskilled agents are indifferent between
    living in the city and outside it. All (but one)
    skilled agents strictly prefer living in New
    Orleans
  • The unskilled population increases in the level
    of public education provided

19
Characterization (informal)
  • Private school choice
  • Only rich agents privately provide schooling.
  • Private vs. Public public school is free, but
    fixed at some level.
  • Lowest private consumption of education is
    strictly larger than the publicly provided gm
  • It makes sense to pay for education only if you
    do a much better job than the free option

20
Characterization (informal)
  • Public School financing
  • The level gm is calculated as the unique value
    that maximizes any skilled agent utility (logs
    help here)
  • It maximizes the skilled population
  • It serves to increase the population of unskilled
    agents and thus lower the price P of the
    unskilled good
  • It does not maximize the overall population

21
Katrina
  • Model its effect as an increase in reservation
    utilities
  • Simply the cost of moving back to the city
  • Housing repairs
  • Higher insurance rates
  • Any information cost about the possibilities
    outside the city of New Orleans has been already
    incurred, albeit involuntarily
  • Classless shock percentage changes in
    reservation utilities are the same for skilled
    and unskilled agents

22
Post-Katrina Equilibrium
  • Unskilled agents play a crucial role. Market
    forces are already compressing their utility to
    the reservation level. To induce them to return
    they must be compensated for the cost of moving
    back.
  • Economic variables
  • The price of the good provided by unskilled
    agents, P, must rise.

23
Post-Katrina Equilibrium
  • Population variables. Smaller overall population
  • Both numbers of skilled and unskilled agents
    decrease, since reservation utilities are higher
  • The poorer skilled agents leave (possibility of
    middle-class disappearance)
  • Under standard regularity conditions, the ratio
    of skilled to unskilled agents increases
    (consistent with the increase in P)

24
Post-Katrina Equilibrium
  • Income inequality. Under standard regularity
    conditions, inequality decreases
  • The New New Orleans is relatively more
    skilled-intensive (composition effect)
  • The income of unskilled agents rises

25
Post-Katrina Equilibrium
  • Welfare
  • Returning unskilled agents are exactly
    compensated for the cost of moving back, but not
    for the one-time hit that made them leave
  • Returning skilled agents are worse-off
  • They are non-marginal for them the migration
    constraint is slack. They are the only agents
    that can absorb the negative effects of Katrina
    without leaving

26
Education
  • Average school quality improves both for private
    school and for public school
  • Investment in public school is increasing.
    Skilled agents realize it is cheaper for them to
    induce more unskilled agents to return through
    education rather than through even higher pay
  • For private school composition effect. The
    poorer skilled agents have left.

27
Conclusion
  • Overall, the balance of expected developments for
    the New New Orleans is positive
  • First caveat the composition effect is ethically
    problematic
  • Second caveat the regularity conditions may not
    be satisfied. This may produce a middle-class loss
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