GhostWriter16
Deity
This isn't a great OP. It was originally a reply to some side tangent in the Rhode Island thread. But maybe we can make something of it.
Reply from other thread spoilered.
The question I didn't answer in the other thread is, why do this? And why do it this way?
Education is important, there is no doubt about it, and since you need one to succeed in life, you shouldn't be denied it because your parents didn't make a lot of money and thus can't afford to send you to school.
That said, as we're finding in threads like the one with the Chicago school, public schools suck in a lot of places, and so a lot of times it wouldn't really make much sense to send your kid there if you can help it. If you are not sending your kid to a government run public school, especially if your reason is that it sucks, you should not be charged both for a crappy public school and whatever private school you send your kid to.
At the same time, I don't want the poor to be denied an education.
At the SAME time, government is a lot less inefficient than the private sector. The only advantage it has is might. The government can raise far more money through taxation than any charity can through donations, even if government is far, far less efficient with that money.
So this plan would take both the good of all schools being private (Efficiency, and not having to pay specifically for crappy schools/being charged twice for the same thing) while simutaneously taking the good in government, that it can ensure that everyone gets an education.
There are some lefty ideas here, even if it fundamentally a right wing, free-market based idea. The counterpoint is that the sum would go to each and every family, since it is being made by taxpayer's money, all taxpayers. If you are a millionaire, you'ds still get the sum of money, whatever that sum is (I'm not sure what an average private school would cost in a world without public schools, that would be what the sum of money is, based on the area it was implemented.)
Any thoughts on this idea? Good idea? Bad idea? Indifferent? Why or why not?
Reply from other thread spoilered.
Spoiler :
My first thought is that this would actually improve on it because it is well known that the US education system sucked. If you were only guaranteed to make profit based on the number of kids that have parents that choose to send them there, you'd have an incentive to make your school a good one. The government has no such incentive because they just use tax dollars to pay for it.
To be clear on what I'm proposing before said discussion, I am not suggesting that poor people not be allowed to attend schools. I'm proposing something more like, each parent gets an education fund to choose a school for their child with (Or, if they decide to homeschool, they can keep the fund as a paycheck for doing homeschooling) while the free market keeps costs to reasonable levels. This fund would be given based on number of children regardless of wealth, and could only be spent on education. (With the exception of parents who homeschool.)
I admit the one flaw is that doing it while ensuring that poor parents do, in fact, send their children to school with that money rather than spending it on something else would be difficult. To counteract this, I'd advocate sending the money from the government directly to the school of the parent's choice. The parent would never see the money, so they'd never be able to do something with it other than ensuring that their kid gets an education.
As for how the homeschooling exemption would work (To ensure that the parent that is taking that money is actually homeschooling their kid) I'd imagine current US law that ensures homeschooling parents actually homeschool rather than simply not send their kids to school would still work under the new free market system.
Come to think of it, I think I'm going to make a new thread for this post. Once I make the thread I'll remove it from this one.
To be clear on what I'm proposing before said discussion, I am not suggesting that poor people not be allowed to attend schools. I'm proposing something more like, each parent gets an education fund to choose a school for their child with (Or, if they decide to homeschool, they can keep the fund as a paycheck for doing homeschooling) while the free market keeps costs to reasonable levels. This fund would be given based on number of children regardless of wealth, and could only be spent on education. (With the exception of parents who homeschool.)
I admit the one flaw is that doing it while ensuring that poor parents do, in fact, send their children to school with that money rather than spending it on something else would be difficult. To counteract this, I'd advocate sending the money from the government directly to the school of the parent's choice. The parent would never see the money, so they'd never be able to do something with it other than ensuring that their kid gets an education.
As for how the homeschooling exemption would work (To ensure that the parent that is taking that money is actually homeschooling their kid) I'd imagine current US law that ensures homeschooling parents actually homeschool rather than simply not send their kids to school would still work under the new free market system.
Come to think of it, I think I'm going to make a new thread for this post. Once I make the thread I'll remove it from this one.
The question I didn't answer in the other thread is, why do this? And why do it this way?
Education is important, there is no doubt about it, and since you need one to succeed in life, you shouldn't be denied it because your parents didn't make a lot of money and thus can't afford to send you to school.
That said, as we're finding in threads like the one with the Chicago school, public schools suck in a lot of places, and so a lot of times it wouldn't really make much sense to send your kid there if you can help it. If you are not sending your kid to a government run public school, especially if your reason is that it sucks, you should not be charged both for a crappy public school and whatever private school you send your kid to.
At the same time, I don't want the poor to be denied an education.
At the SAME time, government is a lot less inefficient than the private sector. The only advantage it has is might. The government can raise far more money through taxation than any charity can through donations, even if government is far, far less efficient with that money.
So this plan would take both the good of all schools being private (Efficiency, and not having to pay specifically for crappy schools/being charged twice for the same thing) while simutaneously taking the good in government, that it can ensure that everyone gets an education.
There are some lefty ideas here, even if it fundamentally a right wing, free-market based idea. The counterpoint is that the sum would go to each and every family, since it is being made by taxpayer's money, all taxpayers. If you are a millionaire, you'ds still get the sum of money, whatever that sum is (I'm not sure what an average private school would cost in a world without public schools, that would be what the sum of money is, based on the area it was implemented.)
Any thoughts on this idea? Good idea? Bad idea? Indifferent? Why or why not?