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Lamitie, Robert E.; And Others – 1981
The partial financing of New York State's public schools with a state-mandated tax coupled with state aid based upon county or regional wealth rather than local district wealth would provide greater equalization of both revenues and expenditures of school districts than does the present law. A comparable increase in state aid appropriations under…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Equalization Aid, Finance Reform, Fiscal Capacity
Benson, Charles S. – 1971
This paper critically examines some of the ways in which schools are currently financed and argues for State assumption of educational costs as a viable alternative. The document begins with a description of current school district revenue sources and discusses the official division of responsibility for school finance between the State and local…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Finance, Equal Education, Equalization Aid
Adams, E. Kathleen – 1980
Addition of fiscal response factors to the traditional simulation model of school finance demonstrates that the traditional model underestimates both the costs and impacts of state aid programs at the district level. The study reviews research on fiscal response--defined as school districts' taxing and spending behavior after receipt of state…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Equalization Aid, Financial Policy, Income
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Johnson, Michael S. – Economics of Education Review, 1984
This article examines a method of determining school aid, potential sources of abrupt changes arising from revaluation, an illustrative case, and policy options. It finds many problems caused by jurisdictional fragmentation and time lags inherent in the equalization process. Tables include full-value determinations and school district property…
Descriptors: Assessed Valuation, Case Studies, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance
Swanson, Austin D. – 1972
This paper attempts to examine for the State of New York the merits of a district power equalizing formula when it is compared to full State funding of a uniform expenditure level. The author argues against full State funding because he believes that the net effect of many independent decisions that affect small groups of children is preferable to…
Descriptors: Decentralization, Educational Finance, Elementary Schools, Equal Education
Widerquist, Karl – Educational Priorities Panel, 2001
A proposal in the New York State Assembly in 2000 considered eliminating Tax Equalization Aid to school districts in order to fund the elimination of aid caps, called Transition Adjustment. In response to that proposal, this report examines the equalizing or disequalizing effects of three types of New York state aid to school…
Descriptors: State Schools, Tax Rates, Tax Effort, State Aid