There's a reason so many people buy lottery tickets despite the
astronomical odds against winning: They believe that if they just
had more money, their problems would vanish. But it seldom works
out.
Take the way we've treated education policy. Since 1965, federal
spending on education has quadrupled, from $25 billion then to an
inflation-adjusted $108 billion in 2002. States have clearly won
the spending lottery. But what about the students? By most
measures, student achievement has remained flat during the last
three decades -- hardly a winning ticket.
At some point, you'd think we would slow down, catch our breath and
attempt to find out why this approach is failing before we throw
more money at the problem. No such luck.
Recently, presidential candidate John Kerry announced that, if he's
elected, he'd provide states with $20 billion over the next decade
to hire more teachers and boost their pay. He'd pay for that, he
says, by repealing some of the Bush tax cuts. This mirrors the
Democratic platform, which claims that President Bush is
underfunding the No Child Left Behind law, providing "$27 billion
less than he had promised, literally leaving millions of children
behind."
That makes a nice soundbite. But the truth is that the last thing
states need right now is even more federal money. In fact, they
already have more than they can spend.
The Education Department recently reported that all 50 states, the
District of Columbia and eight territories are sitting on piles of
federal cash -- some $2.7 billion.
At least part of it was intended to help poor children, disabled
students and limited-English learners. But it hasn't been spent.
And the federal government is warning that if it isn't, at a
minimum, earmarked for a specific project by Sept. 30, the states
will have to return it.
This isn't a new thing, either. Just last year, states returned
$154 million in unspent federal education funds. That's money that
sat around, unspent, for three years. And not for lack of trying on
the part of the states.
"We try to spend every penny that the federal government sends us,"
Debbie Ratcliff, a spokeswoman for the Texas Education Agency, told
the Associated Press. But even after her state's best efforts,
Texas still sent back $11 million last year.
That's why it's simply impossible to believe that the federal
government is really underfunding education. If we were giving the
states short shrift, there's no way every single state would be
returning unspent federal education money.
Before we decide to shovel untold billions more their way, let's
give No Child Left Behind a chance to work. After all, the law
requires states to test students annually and report on their
progress. The long-term goal is for every student to be fully
proficient in reading and math within 12 years.
But it's up to the states, not the federal government, to set the
standards. And many states didn't even get a plan in place until
last year.
Meanwhile, states and school districts are busy setting up
accountability programs, trying to find ways to ensure teacher
quality and designing public school-choice programs. As Heritage
Foundation education analyst Krista Kafer noted
recently, it's going to take a few years before we'll really
know if the law is working.
It's probably unfair to judge a federal program on spending alone -- we also should consider whether or not it's delivering "bang for the buck." But it is safe to say, when states are returning hundreds of millions of dollars, that education isn't underfunded. And our children have little hope of winning the education lottery until we stop pretending that it is.
Ed Feulner is the president of The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research institute.