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Abstract
To examine how local income distribution affects both a community’s ability to
pay for schooling and the quality of that schooling, this research merges household and
school census data from South Africa. Empirical results are twofold. First, while the
median income and the average household income increase school fees, inequality in
household income (standard deviation) decreases school fees, which indicates that the
lower tail of income distribution pulls down school fees. Second, an increase in school
fees significantly improves school quality, decreasing the learner-educator ratio and
increasing the number of nonsubsidized educators. The result is consistent with
(1) strategic behavior of the low-income group and (2) optimal school fee determination
with incomplete interhousehold income transfers. Empirical results and simulations
demonstrate the possibility that income and asset inequality may reduce the quality of
public goods, decreasing human capital and income growth for the next generation.