But are profits the best way to measure a "quality product" when it comes to something like education?
I would argue not, or at least that externalized costs need to be internalized somehow (regulation or taxation are the typical means).
That is to say, if we have for profit public schools, I'd want their profits to be tied to the long term effects of results of their students, not to yearly test scores.
>if we have for profit public schools, I'd want their profits to be tied to the long term effects of results of their students, not to yearly test scores.
This is a great idea! Why not do the same for government-run schoolteachers? This may help attract and retain high quality staff, as well as providing low-skilled teachers an incentive to leave.
Are you suggesting that I can't determine for myself if a particular school is providing a good long term education for my child? Or that I shouldn't be able to choose to take them to a different school?
There's no inherent incentive to produce a quality product when chasing profit either, just one that people will give you money for. Sometimes this aligns with quality, other times, it does not.
Why do Americans always insist on conceiving of children as products? Why do they always insist that schools produce children? Last I checked, we disallow reproduction at schools.
I would argue not, or at least that externalized costs need to be internalized somehow (regulation or taxation are the typical means).
That is to say, if we have for profit public schools, I'd want their profits to be tied to the long term effects of results of their students, not to yearly test scores.