'Universidad de Sevilla - Secretariado de Recursos Audiovisuales y Nuevas Tecnologias'
Doi
Abstract
We investigate the relative merits of unconditional cash transfers (UCT), conditional
cash transfers (CCT), and the effects of improvements in education quality on efficiency
and welfare. In our setting, some parents underinvest in their children’s education
because capital market imperfections prevent them from borrowing. Under sufficiently
accurate targeting, CCT are more effective than UCT in enhancing the efficiency of
these households’ decisions. However, UCT is superior to CCT in terms of welfare
unless targeting is perfect, in which case UCT and CCT are equivalent. Education
quality is welfare improving, but may not be efficiency enhancing when public education
quality is very lo