We can bail out Wall St., but not education? WTF?
Monday, March 8, 2010 at 22:22 Mr. Maven and I went to lunch last week with a co-worker. He’s a software engineer from India. Smart guy, who set us straight on a couple things.
Like Pakistan.
Like China.
Like education.
He essentially said what Robert Reich says in this column, that we can’t afford not to bail out our schools. My co-worker thinks that we’re crazy to keep cutting education spending, saying that no other sensible country would do that, and he can’t understand why we are.
I told him: America elected George W. Bush, therefore it’s clear that they don’t value education. Governor Jim Gibbons,( R-NV ) is proof of that on the state level. He’s got his.
Read what Reich has to say:
Bail Out Our Schools
By Robert Reich
Monday, March 8, 2010
Any day now, the Obama administration will announce $4.35 billion in extra federal funds for under-performing public schools. That’s fine, but relative to the financial squeeze all the nation’s public schools now face it’s a cruel joke.
The recession has ravaged state and local budgets, most of which aren’t allowed to run deficits. That’s meant major cuts in public schools and universities, and a giant future deficit in the education of our people.
Across America, schools are laying off thousands of teachers. Classrooms that had contained 20 to 25 students are now crammed with 30 or more. School years have been shortened. Some school districts are moving to four-day school weeks. After-school programs have been cancelled; music and art classes, terminated. Even history is being chucked.
Pre-K programs have been shut down. Community colleges are reducing their course offerings and admitting fewer students. Public universities, like the one I teach at, have raised tuitions and fees. That means many qualified students won’t be attending.
Last year the nation committed $700 billion to bail out Wall Street banks, the engines of America’s financial capital, because we were told we’d face economic Armegeddon if we didn’t.
We’ve got our priorities backwards. Our schools are the engines of our human capital, and if we don’t bail out public education we face a bigger economic Armegeddon years from now.
Financial capital moves instantly around the globe to wherever it can earn the best return. Human capital – the skills and insights of our people – is the one resource that’s uniquely American, on which our future living standards uniquely depend.
Starting immediately, the federal government should give states and local governments interest-free loans to make up for all school and university budget shortfalls. The loans can be repaid when the recession is over and local and state tax revenues revive.
Over the longer term we must shift incentives away from financial capital toward human capital. A tiny one half of one percent tax on all financial transactions would generate about $200 billion a year, according to the Economic Policy Institute. That might put a crimp on Wall Street bonuses but it’s enough to fund early childhood education, smaller K-12 classes, and lower tuitons and fees for public higher education.
The Street’s financial capital is important to the American economy, but over the long term the classroom’s human capital is absolutely crucial.
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