Affirmative Action in a Competitive Economy
SSRI Working Paper No. 9914
17 Pages Posted: 22 Nov 2000
Date Written: April 15, 2000
Abstract
We consider a model of endogenous human capital formation with competitively determined wages, where discrimination between ex ante identical groups is sustainable in equilibrium. An affirmative action policy consisting of a quota may "fail" in the sense that there still may be equilibria where groups are treated differently. However, the incentives to invest for agents in the discriminated group are improved by affirmative action if the initial equilibrium is the most discriminatory equilibrium in the model without the policy. The welfare effects are ambiguous. We demonstrate that it is possible that the policy makes the intended beneficiaries worse off: even if the starting point is the most discriminatory equilibrium the expected payoff may decrease for all agents in the target group.
Keywords: Affirmative Action, Statistical Discrimination, General equilibrium, Asymmetric Information, Human Capital
JEL Classification: D58, D62, D82, J41, J71, J78
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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