Failure to expand funding for public education?
3. The failure of American taxpayers to support their state and local governments in expanding funding for public education--and the impact of reduced public education effort in sharpening the distinction between rich and poor.
Figures from page 15 here ("As seen in the bottom row of Table 2, real expenditures per pupil more than tripled over this period.").
Prof. DeLong is not normally much troubled by facts, especially given his ability to delete the inconvenient ones.
ReplyDeleteYes: This cohort of white males is the first in American history that will not have more education than their fathers did...
ReplyDeleteHow does per capita support of higher education track over that period? I know spending on "lower" ed has risen over the years, but I keep hearing that government support of higher ed is declining. Is this decline a fiction also?
ReplyDeleteEven if Brad's contention about the "cohort of white males" were true (and I have no reason to take his word for it), that's completely different from the contention that the American people since 1980 have refused to support expansions in funding for public education. That contention was just false, as stated; perhaps Brad could modify it to read, "People have only expanded school funding by 50% [or whatever] in real terms, rather than by the 70% that I think necessary," but that would have a different ring to it.
ReplyDelete