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FREE TO CHOOSE: A Personal Statement
is income within it, the less reason there is for government to
finance schooling. The parents bear most of the cost in any event,
and the cost for equal quality is
undoubtedly higher when they
bear the cost indirectly through taxes than when they pay for
schooling directly—unless schooling is very different from other
government activities. Yet in practice, government financing has
accounted for a larger and larger share of total educational ex-
penses as average income in the United States has risen and in-
come has become more evenly distributed.
We conjecture that one reason is the government operation of
schools, so that the desire of parents
to spend more on schooling
as their incomes rose found the path of least resistance to be an
increase in the amount spent on government schools. One ad-
vantage of a voucher plan is that it would encourage a gradual
move toward greater direct parental financing. The desire of
parents to spend more on schooling could readily take the form
of adding to the amount provided by the voucher. Public financing
for hardship cases might remain, but that
is a far different matter
than having the government finance a school system for 90 per-
cent of the children going to school because 5 or 10 percent of
them might be hardship cases.
The compulsory attendance laws are the justification for gov-
ernment control over the standards of private schools. But it is far
from clear that there is any justification for the compulsory at-
tendance laws themselves. Our own views on this have changed
over time. When we first wrote extensively a quarter of a century
ago on this subject, we accepted the
need for such laws on the
ground that "a stable democratic society is impossible without a
minimum degree of literacy and knowledge on the part of most
citizens.
"
We continue to believe that, but research that has
been done in the interim on the history of schooling in the United
States, the United Kingdom, and other countries has persuaded us
that compulsory attendance at schools
is not necessary to achieve
that minimum standard of literacy and knowledge. As already
noted, such research has shown that schooling was well-nigh uni-
versal in the United States before attendance was required. In the
United Kingdom, schooling was well-nigh universal before either
compulsory attendance or government financing of schooling ex-