Date: 2007
Type: Working Paper
Accounting for the Changing Role of Family Income in Determining College Entry
Working Paper, EUI ECO, 2007/49
WINTER, Christoph, Accounting for the Changing Role of Family Income in Determining College Entry, EUI ECO, 2007/49 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/7555
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Assessing the importance of borrowing constraints for college entry is key for education
policy analysis in the U.S. economy. I present a computable dynamic general
equilibrium model with overlapping generations and incomplete markets that allows
me to measure the fraction of households constrained in their college entry decision.
College education is financed by family transfers and public subsidies, where transfers
are generated through altruism on part of the parents. Parents face a trade-off between
making transfers to their children and own savings. Ceteris paribus, parents who expect
lower future earnings transfer less and save more. Data from the 1986 Survey of
Consumer Finances give support to this mechanism. I show that this trade-off leads
to substantially higher estimates of the fraction of constrained households compared
to the results in the empirical literature (18 instead of 8 percent). The model also predicts
that an increment in parents’ earnings uncertainty decreases their willingness to
provide transfers. In combination with rising returns to education, which makes college
going more attractive, this boosts the number of constrained youths and explains why
family income has become more important for college access over the last decades in
the U.S. economy.
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/7555
ISSN: 1725-6704
Series/Number: EUI ECO; 2007/49
Publisher: European University Institute