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Local Residential Sorting and Public Goods Provision: A Classroom Demonstration Local Residential Sorting and Public Goods Provision: A Classroom Demonstration Keith Brouhle, Jay Corrigan, Rachel Croson, Martin Farnham, Selhan Garip, Luba Habodaszova, Laurie Johnson, Martin Johnson, and David Reiley Year 1 All students begin the demonstration as residents of one dorm. Using a simple voting mechanism, they collectively determine that dorms level of taxation and subsequent public good provision. Year 2 The instructor breaks the class up into two dorms, one made up predom- inately of High Valuers, the other made up predominately of Low Valuers. Each dorm then determines its own level of public good provision. The dorm made up largely of High Valuers should choose a level of taxation and public good provision that is higher than that chosen by the other dorm. Year 3 Those students who were initially endowed with a green ticket are given the option to move from one dorm to another. Each dorm again determines its own level of public good provision. Taxation and public good provision should rise in the High Value dorm and fall in the Low Value dorm. Year 4 All students are now free to move to whichever dorm best reflects their preferences. Each dorm determines its level of public good provision one last time. The predictions of the Tiebout model should be fully realized. The Demonstration The classroom demonstration takes about thirty minutes, which leaves time for class discussion afterward. The demonstration will work in classes with as few as six students or as many as 100 students. While designed primarily for a public finance course, the exercise can be used in any course that covers government provision of public goods. The demonstration follows students through four years of college as they choose (or are assigned) a dorm in each successive year. The only thing that differentiates students is their preferences regarding dorm parties, a local public good. And since each dorms residents determine the size of their dorms party budget, the dorms differ only in the bundle of taxation and public good provision offered. At the beginning of the exercise, each student receives a color-coded packet of materials (available from the presenter). Students with blue instructions are High Valuers who value dorm parties at 2×T, where T is the level of taxation dorm residents agree to. Students with red instructions are Low Valuers who value parties at 0×T. Each year, a dorms residents must collectively choose a level of taxation T between $0 and $100 that each student will pay. These taxes are spent collectively to sponsor dorm parties. Since we assume that a unit of dorm parties costs $1, for High Valuers the marginal benefit from contributing always exceeds the marginal cost, while for Low Valuers the marginal cost always exceeds the marginal benefit. The two colors of packets should not be evenly distributed between the two sides of the classroom. For example, two-thirds of the packets on the right side of the room should be red, while two-thirds of the packets on the left side of the room should be blue. Half of the packets (both red and blue) should also contain a green ticket. This ticket determines whether students will be able to change dorms in Year 3. Topics for Discussion Left Right One Dorm Introduction Students in undergraduate public finance courses learn that markets generally underprovide public goods due to the nonexcludable and nonrival nature of those goods. But centralized government provision of locally-consumed public goods may also be inefficient due to heterogeneous preferences. This classroom exercise illustrates the Tiebout hypothesis that residential sorting across multiple communities leads to a more efficient allocation of local public goods (Journal of Political Economy 1956). The exercise also demonstrates problems that arise when certain assumptions of the Tiebout model are not met. By allowing students to uncover the subtleties of the model themselves, this demonstration helps students develop a richer understanding of the models real-world implica- tions and the importance of its underlying assumptions. The classroom initially comprises a single community of students with heterogeneous preferences for a public good (dorm parties); the students determine the level of taxation to be used for public good provision via a simple voting mechanism. Next, the classroom divides into two dorms, each of which determines its own level of public good provision. Then the students have the opportunity to relocate to the dorm where the bundle of public goods and taxes better suits their tastes. At first some students must stay in their original location, but in the final treatment all students are free to move. After each round of sorting, each dorm determines a new level of public good provision. Students see how welfare rises as sorting becomes more complete. This game highlights the usefulness of markets in general and the assumptions necessary for a well-functioning market to reach an efficient outcome. The third round of the exercise may foster classroom discussion about white flight from inner-city school districts, as it shows how some immobile individuals become worse off when mobile individuals move. You may want to begin discussion by focusing on how individual and social welfare change over successive years. By the end of Year 4, most students realize that when similar individuals sort into communities according to their taste for a public good, social welfare is maximized. You can also ask students to discuss their own experience with residential choice and the communities in which they have lived. How did their families decide where to live? Did the quality of schools or other local public goods (e.g., fire protection, parks) play a role? Do they believe everyone in their community wants exactly the same things from the local government? In other words, just how complete is the residential sorting they observe in the real world? You can then emphasize the implications of relaxing the models assumptions. What happens if there are more than two types of residents but only two communities? Or what if a single household belongs to multiple local-public-good communities? Will efficient levels of provision be reached? Perhaps most interesting is a discussion of the costless mobility assumption. Students should be able to come up with several reasons why moving might be costly. Faced with such costs, some low-income residents will not be able to afford to move. Other residents may need to live near where they work. For others, non-pecuniary costs may be more important. For example, many people value living near their relatives and friends, or simply dont like having to adjust to a new environment. In this case, sorting is incomplete and the equilibrium outcome is inefficient. Kenyon College Hi Lo Hi Lo Hi Lo Hi Lo Hi Lo Hi Lo
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