Title: Lecture 2: Designing School Aid Systems
1Lecture 2Designing School Aid Systems
- EDA 757/PPA 730
- Fall 2002
Based partly on presentation developed by
Professor Bruce Baker, University of Kansas.
2Lecture 2 Outline
- Basics of intergovernmental grants
- Objectives
- Types
- Connecting objectives and types
- School finance litigation
- History
- Types of litigation
- Designing general purpose aid
- Defining equity standard
- Types of aid
- Measuring equity
3Objectives of Intergovernmental Grants
- Horizontal equity Help equalize the fiscal
burden of financing a public service across local
governments. - Efficiency Encourage local government to provide
more (or less) of a particular service (e.g.,
special education) - Taxpayer equity Reduce burden on low income
local taxpayers by shifting financing to more
equitable state and federal taxes.
4Conditions of Use of Aid
- General operating aid Very little restrictions
on the use of the aid. Possibly require effort
of maintenance. - Block grant When a number of categorical grants
are bundled into one overall grant that can be
used for broad purpose (e.g. special education). - Categorical grant When grant is targeted to
specific service or object (e.g., textbooks,
computers, transportation).
5Grant Type
- Lump-sum grant A flat amount is provided local
government. Does not vary with amount spent by
local government. - Open-ended matching grant Amount that local
government receives is dependent on what they
spend. State agrees to match local spending at
a certain percent. - Closed-ended matching grant Matching grant,
where there is a limit to how much the
higher-level government is willing to match local
spending.
6Grant Distribution
- Formula grant The grant is distributed based on
a set formula. The local government does not
have to apply. - Project grant The local government has to apply
for the grant through a formal application
process (often used for capital project grants). - Political distribution Distribution is set by
state politicians as part of setting state
budget. Grant is usually only for one year. (In
NY known as member items)
7Matching Grant Types and Objectives
- Correcting horizontal equity problems
- General purpose grant
- Lump-sum aid design
- Distributed by formula
- Encourage more provision of service
- Categorical grant
- Open-ended matching grant
- Distributed by formula (with or without project
application process). - Improve taxpayer equity
- General purpose grant or property tax relief
- Targeted to lower-income households.
8History of State Education Aid
- State financing of local schools almost
nonexistent before 1900. - Early grants in most states were flat grants per
pupil. - Foundation formula (formula-based lump-sum
grant) developed in 1920sstill remains principal
type of grant. - Formula-based matching grants implemented in
1970s as a result of court litigation
(guaranteed tax base or GTB) - Some states have combined foundation and GTB type
grants.
9School Finance Litigation History
- Early cases (McInnis v. Shapiro, 1968, and
Burness v. Wilkerson, 1969)state aid systems
upheld. - Wave I (Serrano v. Priest, 1971, and San Antonio
v. Rodriquez, 1973) - Equal protection cases
- Rodriquez removed federal courts from school
finance litigation.
10School Finance Litigation History
- Wave II (1973 to 1989)
- Cases in state courts
- Mix of equal protection clause and education
clause cases. - Focus mainly on equity with limited success.
- Wave III (1989 to present)
- Most visible cases are based mainly on education
clause. - Adequacy standard has become major equity
standard. - New Yorks CFE case falls into this category.
11Equal Protection Clause
- New York No person shall be denied the equal
protection of the laws of this state because of
race, color, creed, or religion (N.Y. Const.
Art. I, 11) - Strict scrutiny test If policy affects
fundamental right, then must serve a compelling
governmental interest. (System usually
overturned) - Rational basis test If policy not affecting
fundamental right, then state has to prove that
it is rationally related to legitimate government
purpose. (System usually upheld)
12Education Clause
- New York The legislature shall provide for the
maintenance and support of a system of free
common schools, wherein all the children of the
state may be educated. (N.Y. Const. Art. XI,
1) - Other common clauses efficient, thorough and
efficient - First have to define the standard associated with
the education clause. (May use legal precedence,
intentions of constitutional founders.) - Second have to demonstrate the present school
finance system violates this standard.
13Steps in Developing Basic Operating Aid System
- 1) Define the equity standard
- 2) Develop key measures
- 3) Design aid formula
- 4) Estimate equity impacts of grant.
14Defining Equity Standard
15Develop Key Measures
- Fiscal capacity Revenue that can be raised with
a reasonable tax burden on residents? Choices - Property values per pupil
- Income per pupil
- Fiscal need (costs) Spending required to provide
similar services (or opportunity to achieve
similar student performance). Measured by - Cost index cost of resources, student needs
- Weighted pupils poverty, LEP, special needs.
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17Developing a Cost Index
- Determine relationship (using statistics) between
spending per pupil and factors that district - Can control student performance, efficiency
- Cant control private salaries, enrollment size,
student characteristics. - Estimated spending per pupil in each school
district holding factors district can control at
state average. - Divide predicted spending by average spending in
state (times 100) to get cost index. - Index of 150 indicates that it will cost 50
more in this district to reach standard than
average district.
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19Option 1 Flat GrantComparison of Per Pupil
Revenue for 2 Districts
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21Option 2 Foundation Program
- No adjustment for costs (minimum spending per
pupilF) - Aid (per pupil) F r V
- F state-set foundation spending per pupil
- r state-set minimum local tax rate
- V local property values per pupil
- Adjustment for costs (minimum level of resources
or student performance) - Aid C F r V
- C cost index/100.
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24Option 3 Guaranteed Tax Base Formula (Matching
Grant)
- With no cost adjustment
- Aid r (GTB - V)
- r property tax rate (set by district)
- GTB tax base guaranteed by the state
- V local property values per pupil
- With cost adjustment
- Aid r ((C x GTB) - V)
- C cost index/100.
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27Equity MeasuresRelative Equity
- Federal Range Ratio Difference in spending
between districts at 95th and 5th percentile as
percent of spending at 5th percentile. - FRR (E95 - E5) / E5
- Coefficient of Variation average variation as
percent of average spending. - CV Standard deviation/mean
- Gini coefficient most comprehensive equity
measure.
28The Gini Coefficient
Gini Coefficient X / (X Y) Range 0 to 1 0
is perfect equity.
29Equity Measure for Fiscal Neutrality
- Correlation of per pupil spending and property
wealth (or income). - Correlations range from 1 to 1
- Measure linear association between variables, and
whether relationship is positive or negative. - Closer correlation is to zero, the more fiscally
neutral.
30Equity Measures for Adequacy
- For districts below the standard, subtract
spending at the standard (E) from district
spending (E). - E - E distance.
- Multiply these distances by the number of pupils
in each district, and then sum all of these
pupil weighted distances. - Multiply E by the number of students in all
districts (above and below standard). - Divide (2) by (3) to get the average percent of
students below the standard. - McLoone Index is calculated the same way, but
assumes standard is the same as median.
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34Summary of Formulas
- Flat Grant
- Strengths Allows funds to be distributed to all
districts (often considered political pay-off to
wealthy districts) - Weaknesses Provides minimal equity unless used
to entirely replace local funding. - Foundation
- StrengthsProvides direct support to schools to
meet adequacy standards. - WeaknessesBy targetting funds, diminishes local
control over spending (only local )
35Summary of Formulas
- Flat Grant
- Strengths Simple, politically popular because
allows funds to be distributed to all districts. - Weaknesses Does little to improve equity unless
used to entirely replace local funding. - Foundation
- Strengths Focused on funding districts to reach
adequacy standardmost effective way to fund
adequacy standard. - WeaknessesBy forcing minimum local tax effort
diminishes local control over spending. Doesnt
prevent wealthy districts from supplementing
foundation with more local taxes.
36Summary of Formulas
- Guaranteed Tax Base
- StrengthsAllows communities greater local
control over spending decisionsmay be most
effective formula for fiscal neutrality standard. - WeaknessesState cannot guarantee or control
spending equity, only tax base equity. - Combination GTB and Foundation
- StrengthsCan be used to create to both bring up
the bottom (foundation), and equalize any local
supplementation beyond foundation. - Weaknesses More difficult to design and
implement.