Child labor and the education of a society

We examine economic growth, inequality and education when the wellspring of growth is the formation of human capital through a combination of the quality of child-rearing and formal schooling. The existence of multiple steady states is established, including a poverty trap, wherein children work ful...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bell, Clive (Author) , Gersbach, Hans (Author)
Format: Article (Journal) Book/Monograph Working Paper
Language:English
Published: Bonn IZA 2001
Series:Discussion paper series / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit 338
In: Discussion paper series (338)

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Author Notes:Clive Bell; Hans Gersbach
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Summary:We examine economic growth, inequality and education when the wellspring of growth is the formation of human capital through a combination of the quality of child-rearing and formal schooling. The existence of multiple steady states is established, including a poverty trap, wherein children work full-time and no human capital accumulation takes place, with continuous growth at an asymptotically steady rate as an alternative. We show that a society can escape from the poverty trap into a condition of continuous growth through a program of taxes and transfers. Temporary inequality is a necessary condition to escape in finite time, but long-run inequalities are avoidable provided sufficiently heavy, but temporary taxes can be imposed on the better-off. Programs aiming simply at high attendance rates in the present can be strongly non-optimal.