Education Secretary
Justine Greening spent yesterday telling us how the English school system needs
to support those who are
struggling and not the privileged few. The desired outcome is correct, but
her method for getting there is fraught, because the best way to improve the English
school system is to drastically reduce the state's involvement in it. The
problem with having the state running our education system is that it makes
education far more expensive than it needs to be, and it diminishes the quality
in doing so. So pupils get a less good but more expensive education than would
be the case if more supply-side competition was introduced.
I'm
now going to tell you something that will startle you, or at least many of you.
Without the meddling of the state in our education system, the majority of the
pupils that go through the school system would get a similar kind of education
to the quality that privately educated pupils get.
Let’s
do some maths to illustrate this. Last time I checked, there were 9.7 million
pupils in education, with approximately 630,000 attending private school. The
government’s annual education spending is usually between £85-90 billion. Given
that private schools have charitable status, so get no money from the state
education budget, that equates to roughly 9 million state-educated pupils
costing the government around £90 billion per year.
That
works out at a cost of £10,000 per pupil per year. Now according to ISFA the
average cost of private school fees is between £10-11,000 per year. It varies
for reasons we needn’t go into here, but as you can see, the average cost to
educate a pupil through the state system and the average cost to educate a
pupil through the private system are very close. For roughly the same cost the
government could send every pupil to the educational standard of private
schools (excepting perhaps the very high fee-paying schools). That's even more
alarming when you consider that currently only 7% of pupils go to private
schools.
Now
I'm not denying that that is a deliberately overly-simplistic model of analysis
- not least because even if all schools were of a higher quality nationwide
there are going to be hundreds of pupils who through all kinds of background disadvantages
and bad choices are not up to the standard of a decent education. But if
nothing else, the arithmetic above gives a strong indication of how much the
state education system fails to give so many of its pupils value for money
(approximately 22% of school leavers in the state system leave with the
reading, writing and numeracy skills of an 11 year old).
In the most comprehensive
study ever conducted, spanning 25 years of international research comparing
state-provided education versus market-competitive education Andrew J. Coulson
showed in his paper Markets
vs. Monopolies in Education just how far state schools fall behind the more
highly competitive market-based schools. This is in no small part due to the
fact that market-based education has the flexibility both to meet different
needs and cater for diverse abilities of the pupils.
I know many in the UK are
currently horrified with the idea of anyone but the state providing our
education system, but that's mainly because most people are still relatively
unapprised of quite how a market system would work. For ease, you have to
remember that if you're paying for your child's education in a market-based
system you get to keep more of your money, and the money you pay goes more directly
in to benefit your child's education. In other words, more money reaches the
school children, because under the current bureaucratic system there are more officials
employed in the education sector than there are teachers, and in some schools
there are more admin staff than there are teachers.
But what about the poorest people in society - isn't
it important that the state provides them with an education?
No, it is important that
the state provides them with the funds to acquire an education (vouchers sound
like a good idea to me), not the education itself - that should be the parents' responsibility (where there are barriers to this happening then the law should become involved). Think of food - that is
vitally important, more so than even education, but the state doesn't have a
nationalised food policy, it subsidises hungry people with the cash to buy
food.
That is what would happen in a market-based school system - the parents
that cannot afford to pay for their children's education would receive the
funds to pay for their children's education (and any help they needed), but the schools would be run
privately, without the layers of state bureaucracy, meaning the money spent on
education more directly benefits the children.
Furthermore, the price and quality of education improves significantly thanks to the forces of competition and
increased choice on the part of the parents, and increased accountability on the
part of the teachers. And remember, in my low tax, small state, market-driven financially
autonomous society parents are going to have a lot more disposable income with
which to make economic decisions.
Don't forget too that by
and large a proper education is limited only to those who voraciously seek
knowledge - the rest are just children herded like sheep into a classroom and
narrowly shaped to fit into the agendas of the rent-seekers that govern us. One
thing is for sure, just like the UK
health system, the UK
education system simply cannot be sustained with the current model. So, to
finish, I'm going to make a twofold prediction about the future of our
education system.
A prediction
In the first place, give
it a few decades henceforth (maybe six or seven, possibly sooner) and there
won't be any state-funded schools at all. There will be a market-based school
system where parents shop for education like they shop for everything else,
with the people who cannot afford to shop being given the funds with which to
choose school places for their children.
In the second place, as
the efficiencies of the market-based education system become more and more
apparent, the inefficiencies of school buildings - such as the cost of
maintaining the buildings and concomitant taxes, time lost travelling to and
from school, changing classes during the day, registration and other
administrative hold-ups, the sub-optimal class sizes and the numerous other
interruptions to learning - will be weeded out by the gradual transition
towards more widespread home-schooling.
Once you add to that the
prodigious technological capacity we'll have at our disposal in the future, I
predict home tutoring in small neighbourhood coalitions of about 4 or 5
families will be the standard way that children are taught (this will ensure
social skills are not omitted). In fact, thanks to the advances of future technology, education will probably be so cheap to provide that the poorest people
in society will all be able to be educated at a relative price of next to
nothing.
And while you're pondering
that, and possibly harbouring concerns about how the poor might be helped along
under a more market-led system, just look across at how these young people are
doing now under a state-run system, and in the case of those who are worst off,
think that it couldn't really be much worse for them than it is now. Literally
thousands of young people are leaving school lacking the basic skills and
requirements necessary to carve out a career for themselves, in a society in
which, thanks to political interference, education is not coterminous with the
jobs available, and vice-versa. A more market-driven, technologically
innovative system cannot do any worse for these young men and women that the
current system - quite the opposite.
Think about it, even by
today's relatively unevolved standards (relative to 100 years henceforward I
mean) even most poor children have their own device with which to access the Internet,
which means they literally have access to the entirety of the whole world's
knowledge. Imagine how much more sophisticated learning can be in the future
with even better technology and better systems to organise it.
These home school
coalitions will benefit the pupils no end: they will be less prone to picking
up bad behaviour from other children and less susceptible to bullying or
scholastic isolation. For all sorts of reasons related to time, money and
resources, home schooling is a remarkably proficient method of teaching
children - not just with facts to learn but in shaping them with the wisdom of
'how' to think.
There will also be much
more diversity in the ranges of learning available, with specialised learning
for pupils with particular types of mental and physical abilities, specific
types of interests, nuanced barriers to learning, and the multitude of other
ways that a localised, consumer choice-driven, trial and error-based system
enriches society.
The effect of
state-enforced taxation, in most sectors, not just education, is that it
reinforces the monopoly of politicians and diminishes the ability of consumers
to spend their own money more autonomously. As we continue to evolve and more
people begin to understand that most of society's achievements and advances
come from the bottom up not the top down, we will begin to redress the problem,
diminishing the state's control on our finances and strengthening our own.
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