Reforming Reforms: Changing Incentives in Education Finance in Vermont
Stephen Schmidt and
Karen Scott
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Karen Scott: Department of Economics, Union College
Education Finance and Policy, 2006, vol. 1, issue 4, 441-464
Abstract:
In 1997, Vermont passed Act 60, which reformed its education finance system to achieve greater equality of spending. The reform encouraged wealthy towns to reduce spending; it was politically unpopular and was replaced, in 2004, by Act 68. We analyze the spending incentives created by the two acts and estimate the effects the change will have on spending inequality. Act 68 reduces tax prices for education spending in all towns, but reduces them disproportionately for wealthy towns. It increases education spending in Vermont but also increases inequality of spending. Because spending is inelastic with respect to tax prices, the increase in inequality is small relative to existing inequality. Our findings demonstrate that understanding the way towns respond to financial incentives, economically and politically, is critical in designing successful reforms. They suggest that it is difficult to maintain finance systems that give wealthy towns strong incentives to spend less or subsidize poorer towns. Using state revenues to subsidize schools achieves nearly asmuch equality as more explicit attempts to force wealthy districts to share resources. © 2006 American Education Finance Association
Keywords: education finance; spending inequality; Vermont (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I22 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2006
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