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National Wealth Tax to Fund Education?
by
George C. Leef,
March 25, 2005
Like all socialist enterprises, public
education in the United States is very high in cost
and very low in positive results. While some students
graduate from public schools with sharp intellectual
skills (often owing more to their home environment than
to their school instruction), many others drift aimlessly
through 12 years of classes where little is expected of
them, academic standards have sunk out of sight, and
discipline is a joke. The teachers are protected by union
contracts with piranha-like teeth and they have little
incentive to do their best.
And what their best might be is highly questionable.
Thanks to strict state licensing laws, it is almost
obligatory for anyone who wants to teach in public
schools to go through a lengthy course of study in a
college or university school of education,
where the emphasis is on dubious pedagogical theories
such as cooperative learning and multicultural
sensitivity rather than on the mastery of subject matter
and how best to impart that knowledge to students. (With
regard to the weakness of teacher-training programs, one
might consult Rita Kramers book Ed School
Follies, or Heather Mac Donalds essay
Why
Johnnys Teacher
Cant Teach.) School administrators seldom
have the freedom to hire teachers who havent been
through the ed school swamp, no matter how much more
competent uncertified people who happen to really know
their math, chemistry, history, English, et cetera may
be.
From its innumerable regulations that impede efficiency
to the overarching fact that there is no penalty for
failure, public education follows a socialist recipe and
we get educational results that are the equivalent of
Soviet-built cars.
When those poor results are recognized, the system and
its defenders can be counted on to say that the problem
is insufficient spending. Never mind that real spending
on public education has been rising steadily for decades
or that nongovernment schools produce better educational
results with far lower per-pupil spending. The problem is
always that we arent investing enough
in public education. In a recent National Public Radio
commentary, Robert Reich (who served as Bill
Clintons secretary of labor and now teaches at
Brandeis University) took exactly that approach.
Reich argues that while public school systems in affluent
areas are turning out students who are college- and
work-ready because they have learned to identify and
solve new problems, recognize patterns, and think
critically, schools in poorer areas arent
able to do that. The reason, of course, is money. Poorer
school districts cant afford to hire really
well-trained teachers and have small classes, Reich says.
Therefore, we have to do something to equalize spending
so all students will have an equal shot at a good
education.
Before we get to Reichs solution, lets stop
and ask whether a shortage of money is really the
problem. In many states, public schools in poorer areas
receive state assistance that boosts their spending to
levels that rival that of the most prosperous areas. In
Michigan, for example, per-pupil spending in Detroit in
2002 was $9,532, compared to the state average of $7,733.
Poor Detroit was not far behind ritzy
neighboring Birmingham, where per-pupil spending was
$11,456. True, there is some difference, but
its not Appalachia versus Beverly Hills.
Furthermore, we have already experimented with huge
increases in educational spending in poor areas. In
Kansas City, because of an edict from a federal judge in
1985, spending was vastly increased to build
state-of-the-art schools that have been called Taj Mahals. After
nearly 20 years of that policy, however, student test
scores were as low as ever. High per-pupil spending is
not a sufficient condition for good educational results.
Nor is it a necessary condition. We know that because
there are many nongovernmental schools in poor urban
areas that produce remarkably skilled graduates, despite
the fact that they operate on shoestring budgets. Often,
those schools use makeshift buildings, hire uncertified
teachers, and have relatively large classes (something
that is common in Japan, where high teacher quality is
regarded as far more beneficial than low class size).
There is a great deal of information on the success of
nongovernment urban schools; one good source is Sol
Sterns book Breaking Free. It is
therefore true that high spending is not a necessary
condition for educational success.
The problems that beset public education are deep and
inherent, rooted in the very nature of any enterprise
that obtains its revenue not from willing payers, but
from taxes. Throwing more money at public education can
no more solve its problems than sending more foreign aid
to North Korea can end its inability to feed its people.
Still, Professor Reich wants to throw more money into
public education.
He wants to do away with local property taxes to fund
public education and institute a national wealth tax
instead, which he recommends setting at one tenth
of one percent of everyones total assets each year,
to be distributed to school districts around the country
on the basis of the number of kids they have to
educate. Reich contends that his national wealth
tax would be simple and fair, a means of
giving every school a fighting chance.
How could there be any objections to that?
First off, it wouldnt be simple. We would need a
new federal agency to determine the value of
everyones assets. The Internal Revenue Code goes on
for thousands of pages in the attempt to define
income and the effort to place a value on
everyones wealth would be hardly less difficult. A
new federal bureaucracy demanding reports on the value of
everything from houses to stamp collections, golf clubs
to fishing boats? Maybe Reich isnt bothered by that
prospect, but I find it most unappealing.
Second, it wouldnt be fair. There is nothing fair
about confiscating any amount of wealth from people who
dont want to support schools in Detroit, New York,
Washington, D.C., or even their hometown. People are
entitled to do what they want with their own income or
wealth. Professor Reich is free to give as much money as
he wants to help poor schools from his own pocket, and
hes free to implore us to do likewise, but he has
no moral right to compel the rest of us to do the same.
Third, it would never stop. Reich may think that his
initial .001 wealth tax would be enough money, but as
sure as the sun will rise tomorrow, it wouldnt be.
The education establishments appetite for money is
unending, and once the camel had its nose inside the
wealth-tax tent, it would continue pushing in. Just as
the income tax started out small but rapidly grew, so
would the wealth tax for education.
And fourth, it wouldnt do any good. The reason
inner-city schools do so poorly is not that they
dont have enough money to spend, but that the funds
they receive are sent into a bureaucratic black hole. In
New York, for example, schools remain in pathetic
condition, despite an enormous budget, because of such
monstrosities as the School
Construction Authority. The late Peter
Bauer used to point out that foreign aid does far more to
prop up tyrannical regimes than to help hungry people and
that is exactly what would happen with increased
government spending on public education. Dumping more
money into public education would fatten the wallets of
those who feed at the public education trough, but it
wouldnt lead to better student learning.
Poor people can buy high-quality food, clothing, and
other necessities because they get the benefit of a free
market in those things. For good education, what they
need is a free market in schools. If you really care
about the education of children and not just poor
ones you should forget about new taxes or
reforms and advocate the separation of school
and state.
George C. Leef is the director of the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy in Raleigh, North Carolina, and book review editor of The Freeman. Send him email
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