by Katharine L. Bradbury
January/February 1994
Most decisions about the level of local public school spending are
made by local school districts. Their choices are conditioned by local
resources and the availability of external funds, mostly from state
governments. A major purpose of this substantial state aid is to further
the goal of equal educational opportunity by helping to make spending
more equal in rich and poor districts.
This article investigates the link between school spending disparities
and state school aid by using data on school finances and community
attributes to model the determinants of per-pupil operating spending
by Massachusetts and Rhode Island school districts. These estimated
relationships are used to quantify the impact of recent and newly enacted
aid programs on educational expenditures in Massachusetts communities,
focusing on their likely effect on spending disparities.
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