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FREE TO CHOOSE: A Personal Statement
undermine our liberty. The educational establishment is up in
arms in defense of its existing powers and privileges. It is sup-
ported by many public-spirited citizens
who share a collectivist
outlook. But it is also under attack. Declining test scores through-
out the country; increasing problems of crime, violence, and dis-
order at urban schools; opposition on the part of the overwhelm-
ing majority of both whites and
blacks to compulsory busing;
restiveness on the part of many college and university teachers
and administrators under the heavy hand of HEW bureaucrats—
all this is producing a backlash against the trend toward cen-
tralization, bureaucratization, and socialization of schooling.
We have tried in this chapter to outline a number of construc-
tive suggestions: the introduction of a voucher system for ele-
mentary and secondary education that would give parents at all
income levels freedom to choose the schools their children attend;
a contingent-loan financing system
for higher education to com-
bine equality of opportunity with the elimination of the present
scandalous imposition of taxes on the poor to pay for the higher
education of the well-to-do; or, alternatively, a voucher plan for
higher education that would both improve the quality of institu-
tions of higher education and promote greater equity in the dis-
tribution of such taxpayer funds as
are used to subsidize higher
education.
These proposals are visionary but they are not impracticable.
The obstacles are in the strength of vested interests and preju-
dices, not in the feasibility of administering the proposals. There
are forerunners, comparable programs in operation in this coun-
try and elsewhere on a smaller scale. There is public support for
them.
We shall not achieve them at once. But insofar as we make
progress toward them—or alternative programs directed at the
same objective—we can strengthen the foundations of our free-
dom and give fuller meaning to equality
of educational oppor-
tunity.
CHAPTER 7
Who Protects
the Consumer?
"It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or
the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to
their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity
but
to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own neces-
sities but of their advantages. Nobody but a beggar chuses to
depend chiefly upon the benevolence of his fellow citizens."
—Adam Smith,
The Wealth of Nations,
vol.
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