Home > Authors > Christian A. L. Hilber > Why do households without children support local public schools?
Why do households without children support local public schools?
"While residents receive similar benefits from many local government programs, only about one-third of all households have children in public schools. Below, we argue that capitalization of school spending into house prices can encourage residents to support spending on schools, even if the residents themselves will never have children in schools. We identify a proxy for the extent of capitalization based on the supply of land available for new development. Using a plausibly exogenous shock to local spending in Massachusetts, we show that house prices change more strongly in response to the demand shock in areas with little undeveloped land than in areas with plenty of undeveloped land and that communities with little available land also spend more on schools. We then extend these results using national data from school districts, showing that per pupil spending is positively...