
Article
Reducing Inequality Through Dynamic Complementarity: Evidence from Head Start and Public School Spending
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy
(2019)
Abstract
We compare the adult outcomes of cohorts who were differentially exposed to policy-induced changes in Head Start and K12 spending, depending on place and year of birth. IV and sibling-difference estimates indicate that, for poor children, these policies both increased educational attainment and earnings, and reduced poverty and incarceration. The benefits of Head Start were larger when followed by access to better-funded schools, and increases in K12 spending were more efficacious when preceded by Head Start exposure. The findings suggest dynamic complementarities, implying that early educational investments that are sustained may break the cycle of poverty.
Keywords
- Head Start,
- Early Childhood Education,
- School spending,
- Dynamic complementarity
Disciplines
Publication Date
2019
Citation Information
Rucker C Johnson and C. Kirabo Jackson. "Reducing Inequality Through Dynamic Complementarity: Evidence from Head Start and Public School Spending" American Economic Journal: Economic Policy (2019) Available at: http://works.bepress.com/c_kirabo_jackson/32/