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by babesh
2055 days ago
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This comment is wrong on a fundamental basis. Richer areas get less state funding than poorer school districts. These districts have to scramble to just narrow the gap rather than have more funding. The richer areas have higher scoring schools because wealth correlates with school scores probably due to a combination of natural ability and a more conducive parental and community environment (all multiplicative and compounding over time]. A change in taxes does not affect this one iota. There are already flat rates paid per parcel in many cities. There are age over 55 exemptions for certain parcel taxes to raise money for schools. An income tax per parcel does not scale. How do you tax rentals? Who pays the tax for rentals? What if you want to own multiple homes? What if you are buying a house for your parents to live in? |
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True enough.
> Richer areas get less state funding than poorer school districts.
Also true.
> These districts have to scramble to just narrow the gap rather than have more funding.
The necessity of narrowing the gap is not at all obvious; as you point out, test scores correlate with local wealth. But test scores also correlate with per-pupil spending -- and that correlation is (1) small; and (2) negative. This is easy to explain with the model "poor students attract spending", but you also need the coda "...and it doesn't accomplish much".