Study
| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Public school spending increases spur deeper budget deficits
Fiscal Consequences of Higher Spending on K-12 Public Schools in Canada
Summary
- Spending decisions by governments have consequences beyond just the direct effects of the new or expanded spending. Additional spending today requires either higher taxes today or, when financed by deficits (i.e., borrowing), higher taxes in the future. At the provincial level, a lack of spending restraint on elementary and secondary (K-12) education has a disproportionate effect on the government’s finances due to the size of education spending compared to most other spending.
- For Canada as a whole, the increase in per-student spending in K-12 public schools after accounting for the effects of inflation (price changes) was 25.8% between 2004/05 and 2013/14. Over the same period, the province with the highest per-student spending increase in K-12 public schools was Saskatchewan (39.0%) while British Columbia recorded the lowest increase (18.3%).
- Had spending been restrained so that per-student public school spending had been held constant from 2004/05 to 2013/14, education spending on K-12 public schools in Canada would have been 20.3% lower—$49.8 billion instead of the $62.6 billion that was actually spent.
- Constant per-student public school spending would also have meant that, in 2013/14, Alberta and Prince Edward Island would have recorded budget surpluses instead of deficits, Quebec would have essentially balanced its budget two years earlier, and the deficits or surpluses of other provinces would have been substantially reduced or increased respectively.
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Hugh MacIntyre
Senior Policy Analyst (On Leave)
Hugh MacIntyre is a Senior Policy Analyst at the Fraser Institute. He holds an M.Sc. in Political Science from theUniversity of Edinburgh, a Post Baccalaureate Diploma in Economics from Simon Fraser University, and an Honours B.A. from the University of Toronto. Mr. MacIntyre has published over 25 studies and has written over 80 original commentaries appearing in national and regional media outlets including the Globe & Mail and the National Post. His research covers a wide range of economic policy issues including taxation, government finances, government performance, public-private partnerships, labour policy, income mobility, poverty, and charitable giving.… Read more Read Less… -
Joel Emes
Senior Economist, Fraser InstituteJoel Emes is a Senior Economist, Addington Centre for Measurement, at the Fraser Institute. Joel started his career with theFraser Institute and rejoined after a stint as a senior analyst, acting executive director and then senior advisor to British Columbia’s provincial government. Joel initiated and led several flagship projects in the areas of tax freedom and government performance, spending, debt, and unfunded liabilities. He supports many projects at the Institute in areas such as investment, equalization, school performance and fiscal policy. Joel holds a B.A. and an M.A. in economics from Simon Fraser University.… Read more Read Less…
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