What is the impact of school choice programs on overall education funding? | Eastern NC Now

That’s the question Marguerite Roza of Georgetown University’s Edunomics Lab sought to answer in a recent webinar on the topic.

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the John Locke Foundation. The author of this post is Dr. Robert Luebke.

    That's the question Marguerite Roza of Georgetown University's Edunomics Lab sought to answer in a recent webinar on the topic. Roza does a real-time financial analysis of public dollars flowing into state private school choice options like ESAs, vouchers or tax credits. What did she find?

  • Public dollars flowing through ESA/vouchers/tax credit programs are a small percentage of overall education funding.
  • ESAs have the largest financial impact and are the fast growing program by type.
  • Financial effects vary substantially state by state.
  • Originally some programs were started only for students with disabilities, but today the financial effects of those are much smaller
  • Less than 1/3 of funding in private options is income restricted.
  • Financial impact on districts varies and can depend on whether the state's growing or shrinking.
  • Forecasting /estimating participation and cost of these programs is tricky.

    So what does all this mean for school choice and public schools in North Carolina? Roza found that in 2023-24 North Carolina's ESA program ($48,943,166) and voucher program ($176,540,00) cost $225,483,166 to operate (North Carolina does not offer a school choice tax credit program). The K-12 education budget for 2023-24 is $11,564,559, 926. As such private school choice programs account for approximately only 1.9 percent of the total K-12 budget.

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    As enrollment in school choice programs grow, the discussion over the impacts of school choice on public school budgets will likely continue. Roza's financial analysis is certainly not the last word on the impact of school choice on public school budgets. More complex analyses are needed. Nevertheless, her findings provide a good starting point for objectively assessing the impact of school choice on public schools in North Carolina and elsewhere.

poll#210
As School Choice is beginning to take shape in North Carolina: What is your position on what it should evolve into?
  School Choice is only a distraction from the promise of real public education.
  School Choice, as it evolves into its best model to serve the public' s education needs, this benefit will provide choices outside of the historic construct supporting the public school monopoly.
  School Choice - I cannot see how it serves the Education Industry.
241 total vote(s)     What's your Opinion?


poll#164
It has been far too many years since the Woke theology interlaced its canons within the fabric of the Indoctrination Realm, so it is nigh time to ask: Does this Representative Republic continue, as a functioning society of a self-governed people, by contending with the unusual, self absorbed dictates of the Woke, and their vast array of Victimhood scenarios?
  Yes, the Religion of Woke must continue; there are so many groups of underprivileged, underserved, a direct result of unrelenting Inequity; they deserve everything.
  No; the Woke fools must be toppled from their self-anointed pedestal; a functioning society of a good Constitutional people cannot withstand this level of "existential" favoritism as it exists now.
  I just observe; with this thoughtful observation: What will happen "when the Vikings are breeching our walls;" how do the Woke react?
848 total vote(s)     What's your Opinion?

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