Heterogeneous Agents, Human Capital Formation and International Income Inequality
Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper No. 08-015/2
43 Pages Posted: 5 Feb 2008
Date Written: December 2007
Abstract
The paper examines the effect of heterogeneity in individual human capital formation on cross-country income inequality. It considers a two-country model of overlapping generation heterogeneous economies with the following features: (1) individuals are heterogeneous with respect to inborn ability and parental human capital; (2) intergenerational transfers take place via public investment in education financed by tax, and parental education; (3) due to variation in individual human capital, we have endogenous heterogeneity both in labor supply and in parents' participation in self-educating their offspring. Besides exploring cross-country variation in public education, how its low level can lead to a poverty trap and how its high level can result in an increasing society's effective human capital, we study the effects of capital markets integration, in equilibrium, on the intra-generational income inequality in both the investing and receiving countries.
Keywords: Heterogenous Agents, Human Capital, Poverty Trap, Income Inequality
JEL Classification: D91, E25, H52
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation