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Cutting the Federal Budget to Prevent U.S. Bankruptcy:
Part IV Abolish the Department of Education
by
Jim Grichar (aka Exx-Gman)
by Jim Grichar
(Author’s
note: I ask readers for their indulgence because of my extensive
use of the b-lingo bureaucrat-lingo and the detail I used in
presenting my arguments. I do this to reduce bureaucratic counter-arguments
which I expect to receive to the absurdity that they invariably
are.)
For
those who did not read Parts IIII of this series, total actual
cuts in proposed spending (what I call the "Cut-o-meter’) now
amount to $196 billion. Those cuts came from Defense, HUD, NASA,
and other agencies.
The
U.S. Department of Education, created as a political payoff to the
National Education Association by former President Jimmy Carter,
is a sewer for taxpayers’ money and ought to be abolished outright.
Since then, although a few politicians notably former President
Ronald Reagan have paid sporadic lip service to abolishing this
useless organization, most have pushed for additions to its budget
in order to curry favor with NEA members at election time.
With
a budget that was at $35.7 billion in fiscal year 2001, the Bush
Administration, in league with Sen. Ted Kennedy, has managed to
push up that total to a whopping $64.3 billion proposed for fiscal
year (fy) 2005, an increase of over 80% in just four years! Actual
spending for the current fy 2004 will total $62.8 billion.
Instead,
the whole department should be abolished, saving taxpayers $62.8
billion in the next fiscal year and even higher amounts in out-years.
The
"Public Edu-Scam"
Apparently
most Americans are either too stupid and/or too emotional to see
through the "Public Edu-Scam" being perpetrated on them
by the NEA and its lickspittles.
In
private industry, a worker earns higher pay by being more productive,
that is, by turning out more product or output for his or her employer
with the same level of effort. And that output is generally of the
same or higher quality that is consistent with consumer demands,
and consumers freely purchase the product or service.
Public
education is totally different. First of all, citizens are forced
to pay for it via taxes, based upon the dubious notion that what
economists call "positive externalities" or "positive
social benefits" accrue to society, and not just the individual,
from a person receiving an education. What this phony positive externality
argument suggests is that left to the private sector, individuals
would not invest enough in their own or their children’s education
and that there is a rationale for government intervention in the
market for education. What the public education lobby claims is
that all of us benefit from being taxed to educate even dumb, intellectually
lazy or incorrigible students, and that some vague benefits accrue
to the rest of society from pouring ever-increasing amounts of taxpayer
funds down this rathole; that is, into a bad investment.
That
these so-called benefits are never quantified in a rigorous manner
should make one suspect whether any such claimed benefits even exist.
And that is the only rationale for the forced taxpayer provision
of education. There are certainly no other rational economic arguments
for the forced provision of public education. It makes one wonder
how the U.S. and other developed nations made such tremendous economic
and social progress prior to the creation of massive public school
bureaucracies.
Add
to that the nonsense about classroom size and the rest of the education
babble that is used to snow taxpayers into ponying up more good
money on top of bad money. It seems that public education is one
of the main areas where a worker gets a raise for turning out fewer
products (a lower level of students per teacher via smaller classroom
sizes) and of a lower quality (look at the drop in SAT scores prior
to the recent rigging of the SAT numbers to make recent test takers
look more intelligent).
And
look at pay levels for those teaching in private K-12 schools versus
those in the public school establishment. Private teachers on average
earn less money than public school teachers, but it is common knowledge
that children in private schools get a better education, on average,
than those in public schools. Thus, it is readily apparent that
public school teacher pay levels have little, if anything, to do
with the quality of a child’s education, contrary to what the NEA
and edu-crats at all levels of government claim.
The
Results
Despite
having spent hundreds of billions of dollars over the last 25+ years,
U.S. Department of Education programs can at best be said
to have improved the results of all education in the United States
only marginally, and these numbers include students educated in
private schools. In addition, one would have to include all public
and private school expenditures which registered into the trillions
over the last 25+ years, to give a better idea of what spending
on education achieved.
Take
a look at the long-term trend results from the National Assessment
of Education Progress (NAEP), an ongoing Education Department program
that supposedly measures educational achievement by fourth and eight
graders and also measures results for students aged 9, 13, and 17,
over a long period of time. The results of the long-term trend tests
are not comparable with other NAEP annual tests, which have varied
in content over the years so that no inter-year comparisons can
be easily made.
Results
for the long-term trend tests are interesting. For 17 year olds,
in mathematics, the average score from 1978 through 1999 improved
only 0.1% per year. The median score improved by the same percentage.
And the mathematics test allows students to use calculators for
some questions, an implicit acknowledgment of the decline in mathematical
abilities of students. In reading, the average score from 1978 through
1999 for 17 year olds improved a minuscule 0.04% per year, with
the median rising even less per year. And in science, the average
score for 17 years olds rose 0.09% per year from 1978 through 1999.
Regarding
international comparisons, results are available only for mathematics
and science for 8th graders and for reading for 4th
graders, and these results cannot be compared to the long-term trend
results for U.S. students. For mathematics, the latest results are
for 1999, with students from Singapore getting a standardized score
of 604 compared to 502 for U.S. students who took the test. In Science,
Taiwanese students gained the top spot, with a score of 569, compared
to the U.S. score of 515. In reading, results are only available
for 4th graders for 2001, with the U.S. doing a lot better
in a relative sense, with a score of 542 compared to 561 for students
from Sweden. It would have been interesting to see what kind of
results would have been obtained had 17 year olds in all the countries
been given the tests.
Rationale
for giving the NAEP tests is that traditional testing and grading
of students does not measure their academic progress and that more
frequent testing is needed to highlight the need for further programs
(you get to pay more, via higher taxes) to bring students up to
expected levels of achievement. In other words, teachers in public
schools give passing grades to those who really did not learn the
subject matter. Otherwise, actual testing and grading would reflect
student achievement.
Note
further that the NEA and public edu-crats want to avoid using the
results of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) to show whether or
not student performance has improved. They complain that the SAT
only measures the aptitude of those wanting to go to college. And
several years ago public edu-crats managed to convince the firm
that develops and administers the test to change it so as to make
it easier for students to get higher scores, a way of trying to
change the yardstick that in the past has shown what a poor job
public schools have done in educating children despite the huge
sums being spent at both the federal and state and local levels
of government.
How
the Education Department Wastes Money
The
proposed federal Education Department budget for fy 2005 is $64.3
billion, with more hair-brained programs than you can shake a stick
at. A lot of them are grants to states and local school boards which
lead to the hiring of more school administrators, the real growth
industry in public education and the area where an edu-crat can
earn higher pay than by just being a teacher. Here are some of the
larger programs in the budget: 1) $14.3 billion for education for
the disadvantaged, which encompasses grants to schools to help raise
the achievement levels in high-poverty area schools to meet challenging
state academic standards (as if the state standards were challenging!);
2) $6.6 billion for school improvement programs, including improvement
of teacher quality, early childhood education, improving math and
science education, for state-wide education assessments, and more
money for educating students in poor areas; 3) $10.8 billion for
grants to schools for special education programs, which encompass
a wide variety of funding for different classes for special needs
students (that is, hiring more teachers); 4) $3.0 billion for rehabilitation
services and disability research, to help the disabled live independent
lives; 5) $2.0 billion for grants for vocational and adult education,
primarily in the areas of eliminating adult illiteracy (for those
whom the public schools failed to train properly in the first place!)
and for helping students acquire skills for getting jobs and getting
through college; 6) $2.1 billion for higher education, including
the improvement of academic programs by strengthening institutions
(more administrators, at pumped-up salaries), helping those from
disadvantaged backgrounds get into and through college, support
for tribally (i.e., American Indians) controlled vocational and
technical schools; and, 7) $15 billion for Pell grants, that is,
direct scholarships to college students; 8) $6.3 billion for the
net interest subsidy on college student loans.
Federal
subsidies to college students whether via student loans or Pell
grants do not necessarily bring brighter students into colleges.
It mainly serves to pump up the demand for college education, an
indirect subsidy to professors’ salaries. Let those students who
want a college education, but cannot initially afford it, work and
save for it. Such people invariably turn out to be much better students
as they are motivated to work hard in the academic environment to
get a college degree.
Given
the hundreds of billions of dollars spent by the Department of Education
over the last 25+ years and the dismal results, abolishing it would
not harm the quality of education, public or private, in the United
States.
And
the Cut-o-meter Total is .... $259 billion!
By
abolishing the Education Department, estimated annual savings to
the taxpayer would amount to nearly $63 billion over current levels
and would raise the Cut-o-meter to $259 billion. annually over current
spending levels.
April
14, 2004
Jim
Grichar (aka Exx-Gman) [send
him mail], formerly an economist with the federal government,
writes to "un-spin" the federal government's attempt to con the
public. He
teaches economics part-time at a community college and provides
economic consulting services to the private sector.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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Grichar Archives
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