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"More Business and Less Politics!" Schooling, Fiscal Structure, and the 1923 California State Budget
Joan Malczewski – History of Education Quarterly, 2023
In 1923, Los Angeles teachers protested the state's biennial budget, a controversial document from newly elected governor Friend Richardson that significantly cut funding to government agencies. The budget was the culmination of more than a decade of fiscal policy reform that reflected a significant shift in anti-tax sentiment. The expansion of…
Descriptors: Budgets, Taxes, Financial Policy, State Government
Gale, William G. – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
Rising federal debt threatens to reduce the growth of the economy, people's living standards, wages, and the standard of living. A policy solution needs to respect many constraints, most importantly, that it is seen as fair--both within generations and across generations. This article addresses concepts of fairness and their application to…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Federal Government, Justice, Economics
Bartel, Anna C. – Higher Education Politics & Economics, 2020
U.S. legislators recently brought back thirty-four tax programs from legislative limbo, extending them for three years. This includes the tuition and fee deduction, used by taxpayers to save on college expenses. This regressive tax policy flows heavily towards higher-income levels, with almost a third of the deduction going to those with incomes…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Taxes, Finance Reform, Higher Education
Bowling, J. Scott; Boyland, Lori G.; Kirkeby, Kimberley M. – International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 2019
The purpose of this research was to examine funding losses experienced by preschool to grade 12 (P-12) public school districts in Indiana, U.S., from an equity standpoint after the implementation of statewide property tax caps. All Indiana public school districts (N = 292) rely on property taxes as a major source of revenue, but districts…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Taxes, Financial Policy, Educational Equity (Finance)
Venters, Monoka; Hauptli, Meghan V.; Cohen-Vogel, Lora – Educational Policy, 2012
Applying a Multiple Streams framework, the article documents the development and ultimate undoing of what became known as the national sales tax plan for education. The authors identify four factors that coalesced to lead the Nixon administration to propose replacing local property taxes with a federal value-added tax to finance K-12 education.…
Descriptors: Taxes, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, Federal Programs
Klein, Alyson – Education Week, 2010
In an election year dominated by the pitched battle for Congress and major governors' races, state ballot measures involving education are largely tied to a similar theme: the burden of funding K-12 programs when state finances are shaky. In some cases, initiatives, constitutional amendments, and other ballot measures seek to tap new sources of…
Descriptors: Taxes, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, Fiscal Capacity
Byrom, Fletcher L. – USA Today, 1984
The present tax system impedes investment and is unfairly distributed. A consumption tax is the best way to reduce future deficits without curbing growth. Describes the various forms that a consumption tax could take. Such a tax can be as progressive or regressive as policymakers want it to be. (Author/CS)
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Economics, Finance Reform, Financial Policy
Dattalo, Patrick – Social Work, 2007
Concern over Social Security's forecasted long-run deficit is occurring at a time when the program has a short-term surplus. One proposed strategy to address this forecasted deficit is to allow the investment of a portion of payroll taxes into private savings accounts (PSAs). The author analyzes recent proposals for PSAs and concludes that PSAs…
Descriptors: Social Work, Money Management, Retirement Benefits, Taxes
Becker, David – 1999
This issue memorandum describes Constitutional Amendment A, an initiative in South Dakota that, if approved, would prohibit taxation of real property for school purposes. The report provides background information on Constitutional Amendment A, which reads as follows: "The legislature shall make such provision by general taxation as with the…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Financial Policy
Levitz, Larry; And Others – Capital Ideas, 1987
The use of tax-exempt and taxable bonds by colleges and universities to raise capital is discussed. Currently, the most common tax-exempt instrument issued by higher education institutions is the revenue bond. Until the early 1980s the most common form of tax-exempt financing was long-term fixed-rate debt. Variable or floating rate debt became…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Educational Finance, Federal Legislation, Finance Reform
Goldsmith, Scott; And Others – 1990
Alaska will face a large fiscal gap and growing budget deficits in the near future. The timing of such fiscal gap open hinges on the joint effect of state budget growth and the oil price change. This paper explains Alaska's dependence on state spending and offers policy options addressing the fiscal gap. State spending: (1) supports nearly one in…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Finance Reform, Financial Policy, Financial Problems
Alm, James; Lee, Fitzroy; Wallace, Sally – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2005
In this paper, we determine how tax law and income distribution changes have separately contributed to the changes in tax progressivity over time, and also how a specific pre-tax distribution of income affects the equalizing ability of a given tax change. We use information from the Current Population Survey for years that follow immediately after…
Descriptors: Income, Taxes, Finance Reform, Trend Analysis
Lavine, Dick – Center for Public Policy Priorities, 2006
This is the third in a trilogy of policy briefs discussing education and taxation. The first brief explained Texas' need to increase its investment in public education. The second brief explained how a Texas-style personal income tax is the best way both to adequately support public education and to reduce reliance on the property tax. That brief…
Descriptors: Income, Taxes, Public Education, Educational Finance

Ornstein, Allan C. – Theory into Practice, 1978
Finance reform in education is discussed with emphasis on state, local, and federal funding and court litigation. The focus is on equal education for poor communities. (DS)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Finance, Equal Education, Equalization Aid
Liebschutz, David S.; Gold, Steven D. – 1996
This brief summarizes some of the highlights of the book "State Tax Relief for the Poor," by David S. Liebschutz and Steven D. Gold. It examines the policies that states can adopt to provide tax relief for the poor. Although poor families are generally exempt from the federal income tax, they still pay a large amount of taxes to state and local…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Family Financial Resources, Finance Reform, Financial Policy