1. SOCIAL STATUS, EDUCATION AND GOVERNMENT SPENDING IN A TWO-SECTOR MODEL OF ENDOGENOUS GROWTH.
- Author
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Wen-Ya Chang, Ying-An Chen, and Ming-Ruey Kao
- Subjects
SOCIAL status ,EDUCATION ,WEALTH ,GOVERNMENT spending policy ,POWER (Social sciences) ,PUBLIC spending ,GOVERNMENT insurance ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) - Abstract
This paper extends the relative wealth specification of status preference to the two-sector Uzawa (1965 )– Lucas (1988 ) model and examines the effectiveness of government spending on economic growth. It is found that the desire for relative wealth-induced social status and/or the education component of relative wealth-induced social status are important ingredients in determining the growth rate effects of government spending. Provided that the agent is concerned with his or her relative social position, the education-induced social status plays a more important role than the physical-asset-induced social status in determining the validity of public spending on growth. If individuals do not care about their education-driven social rewards, then an increase in government spending has no effect on the balanced growth rate regardless of the presence of the physical-asset-induced social status. A rise in government spending reduces the long-run growth rate if the education-induced social status is present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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