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Financing Early Education Why does early education need more public funding? K Early education is an essential investment K Too few children have access.

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Presentation on theme: "Financing Early Education Why does early education need more public funding? K Early education is an essential investment K Too few children have access."— Presentation transcript:

1 Financing Early Education Why does early education need more public funding? K Early education is an essential investment K Too few children have access to programs K Program quality needs to be increased K Parents need help Can America afford high-quality early education? K How much money does early education need? K How much money is available now? K How can early education get the funding it needs?

2 Why This Matters Now America faces a long-term public finance problem K The federal budget is on an unsustainable path K Social security, Medicare and Medicaid have risen from 30% of non-interest spending in 1980 to 45% today K These 3 will consume 75% of the budget by 2040 K This unfairly burdens today’s children Early education is one investment that: K Increases future workers ability to fund federal programs K Reduces future government costs K Increases intergenerational fairness

3 Economic Benefits of Early Education Increased Productivity K Increased maternal employment and earnings (child care) K Increased skills and knowledge K Increased high school graduation and college attendance K Increased skilled employment and earnings Decreased Costs of Government K Reduced grade repetition and special education K Fewer protective services cases K Less welfare dependency K Reduced crime and delinquency K Decreased health care costs and mortality

4 Economic Returns to Early Education for Disadvantaged Children Cost Benefit to Society  Perry Preschool: $12,000$108,000  Abecedarian: $35,864$136,000  CPC: $7,000$ 48,000 All three studies find that economic benefits from intensive, high-quality programs to taxpayers and participants combined far exceed the cost of high- quality programs (comparable to the cost of public education generally).

5 Could universal preschool produce similar benefits for the middle class? Middle class children have fairly high rates of the problems that preschool reduces for low-income children. Reducing these problems could generate large benefits. Income Retention Dropout Lowest 20%17% 23% 20-80% 12% 11% Highest 20% 8% 3% Source:US Department of Education, NCES (1997). Dropout rates in the United States: 1995. Figures are multi-year averages.

6 Preschool Enrollment (Age 4) by Mother’s Education

7 High Quality Preschool Programs Needed to Produce Benefits  Well-educated preschool teachers  Adequate teacher compensation  Small classes  Strong supervision  High standards for learning and teaching

8 Parents Need Help High quality early education is expensive K Good preschool costs more than state college tuition K Parents can’t afford child care and educational quality K Early education has become a middle class necessity K Single earner families with a parent at home need help too K Lower-income families are left far behind Left on their own parents invest too little in early education K Most families do not invest rationally for the long-term K Parents overestimate current quality of preschool K When most benefits are public even rational private investment is too low

9 Cost of Early Education What determines the cost of early education? K Design of the program--hours, services, quality K Who is eligible--targeted or universal K Take up rates K Systems costs--start up and infrastructure What are benchmarks for cost? K Per pupil costs of K-12 education ($9-$12K in region) K Per pupil costs of preschool special education K Per pupil costs of Head Start K Cost is not the same as state expenditure

10 Early Education Cost in Perspective K American economy, annual GDP = $10,340 billion K Federal annual spending = 2,000 billion K State and local annual spending = 1,000 billion K Social Security and Medicare = 705 billion K First budget for Iraq war = 87 billion K Agri-business subsidies = 20 billion K All major federal programs 0-5= 16 billion K State Pre-K = 2 billion

11 What is the Real Early Education Financing Problem? K America can afford any early education system it wants K Adequate public funding requires a small, but not insignificant, share of government revenue K Voters are not demanding better early education (FL?) K Early education constituencies are not demanding more K Early education must be marketed to voters, its natural constituencies and new constituencies K It’s the economy, stupid!

12 There is no time like the present K State and local revenues will improve in the near future K The number of young children will increase through 2020 K The federal budget situation will become more difficult K Some states will gain population (NJ), others will lose population which can shrink K-12 enrollment K Falling K-12 enrollments open the door to “fund” Pre-K through the schools (administration, facilities, teachers)

13 Where will the money come from? K Increasing taxes and fees--dedicated taxes or general revenue K Increasing gaming revenues K Borrowing K Obtaining a larger share of current education and child care program funding (Title I, reducing 12th grade) K Obtaining a share of other program’s revenues K Cutting other government programs and tax breaks K Charging parents

14 Conclusions K Early education is a good economic investment that needs greater public funding K Increased public funding depends primarily on political influence K Finance is more a political problem than a technical problem K Public financing is likely to become more difficult in future decades


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