-Caveat Lector-

The Education Tax Racket
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

So there’s this guy named Ray Simon. He’s director of the Arkansas
Department of Education, and he’s got a complaint about the boom in home
schooling. The way he sees it, this trend is a threat to our, or at least
his, way of life.

"A third of our support for [government] schools comes from property taxes,"
Ray tells the new issue of Time, which features homeschooling on the cover.
Ray goes on: "if a large number of a community’s parents do not fully believe
in the school system, it gets more difficult to pass those property taxes.
And that directly impacts the schools’ ability to operate."

No surprise there: parents might not want to pay for services they don’t use.
But are we to presume the reverse is true? That parents with kids in
government schools are more likely to back tax increases? Could be, could be.
Certainly kids in school are not taught to be suspicious of the
powers-that-be; quite the reverse.

But at least we have here a bracing look into the heart of American public
education. The goal is to keep the kids in school so that they and their
parents can be taught the merits of the system (the entire government sector)
that keeps them there. In other words, it’s a glorified tax scam, just
another racket to extract money from the public so that it can be transferred
to the pockets of bureaucrats.

No wonder the homeschooling movement – the most momentous educational
development of the last few decades and one of the most hopeful signs for the
future--is starting to catch on in a big way. This is prompting much grousing
from the public-school industry.

Just look at the logic of Ray’s comments. Why do schools need higher and
higher taxes in order to have the "ability to operate"? Why can’t they
operate on the money they have now? It’s because they are run by the
government, which can’t do anything as well as the private sector.

The per-pupil cost of public schools averages $6,000, compared with $3,100
for private schools. In other words, all else being equal, we could abolish
all public schools and the taxes that support them tomorrow, let the market
replace them with private schools, and cut the total cost of education by
nearly half.

Why isn’t this done? The short answer is that there are many people on the
payroll of the education bureaucracy who would be unhappy. But wouldn’t
teachers also be unhappy? Not necessarily. Consider this conclusion of a 1997
report from the National Center on Education Statistics (yes, this is the
government talking):

"Despite poorer pay, private school teachers as a group are more satisfied
than public school teachers with their jobs. In the aggregate, private
schools seem to offer a greater sense of community, greater teacher autonomy
in the classroom, and more local influence over curriculum and important
school policies. In addition, on average, private schools have a climate that
would appear to be more conducive to learning, including greater safety and
fewer problems caused by students having poor attitudes toward learning or
negative interactions with teachers. Finally, private school students take
more advanced courses than do public high school students. They also appear
to follow a more rigorous academic program overall...."

Now, it’s bad enough that the public-school lobby demands twice the amount of
money to run schools than the private schools do. But it’s even worse that
Ray demands ever more money each year through tax increases.

Imagine if the computer industry said it always needed to raise prices in
order to have the "ability to operate." It might like to try, but competition
and innovation keep prices falling. In fact, if it weren’t for
government-instigated inflation, computers would be much cheaper than they
are. And despite falling prices, quality improves every day.

Ray, meanwhile, is thinking only about how to get more money. It seems that a
number of tax-limitation measures have passed in Arkansas in recent years.
Panicked legislators have been inching up the sales tax to feed government’s
voracious appetite, and yet people are starting to catch on to that gimmick
too.

Not so with schools. Even where taxes grow and grow, the quality falls. And
it’s not only the quality of the education that parents have to worry about
these days. They must also be concerned for their kids’ safety.

It’s interesting, for example, to consider that little incident in Jonesboro,
Arkansas, three years ago. Two boys tripped the fire alarm at a middle school
and went on a bloody rampage. When it was over, a teacher and four girls were
dead; 11 more children were wounded.

Does Ray believe that homeschoolers and their anti-tax ways are responsible
for that too? Might such violence have something to do with why parents are
withdrawing their kids from the schools to educate them at home?

As these things go, the Time article on homeschooling wasn’t terrible, but it
was terribly revealing. There’s hardly anything for the Left to complain
about. Homeschoolers are diverse, they socialize, they excel academically,
and they are sought by top colleges.

In the end, Time only seems to have one complaint against them: "Home
schooling may turn out better students, but does it create better citizens?"
The question in translation: do home-schooled students care more about
supporting a failed government system than anything else? The answer is no.
Gloria in excelsis Deo.

August 24, 2001

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