Tools

THE TEACHER FRINGE BENEFIT BOOM

By Charlie Sykes

Wisconsin Spent 8.5% More Than U.S. to Operate Schools
Per Student Salaries Near Parity, Benefits Exceed U.S. Norm by 50%

MADISON—U.S. Census figures released this month showed that Wisconsin spent $10,190 per pupil to operate public schools in 2006. A new report from the Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance (WISTAX) analyzed these data in greater detail and found that school expenditures here ranked 14th highest among the states and 8.5% above the U.S. average ($9,390). The main reason for the above-average ranking was fringe benefits that exceeded national averages by more than 50%....

Examining specifically instruction-related expenses, WISTAX calculated that, in 2006, salaries ($3,939 per pupil) were 2.7% above the U.S. ($3,835) and 16th highest nationally. Benefits were 52.5% above the U.S. mean ($1,854 vs. $1,216) and sixth highest. Instructional costs for items other than compensation ($364), e.g., books and supplies, were 39.7% below average ($583) and ranked 44th in the U.S....

***

Savvy lisener emails:

 

While it will probably be an eye glazer for most of the media, I think this story is important and shocking.  In WI we keep getting fed this myth of “we’re a high tax state because we get such outstanding services.”  This report shows again that in the single largest part of the state budget (more than 40% of all GPR) and the biggest part of your individual tax bill isn’t doing squat to buy us more in terms of educational product.  Our educational spending of 8.5% higher than the national average is almost all used up to fuel benefit spending (benefits – mind you that go to union members whether they are actually teaching or not).

 

So contrary to the “high tax – high service” myth, the reality in Wisconsin education is “high tax – average service – extravagant benefits.”   In short, heavily burdened Wisconsin taxpayers aren’t really “investing in our children’s education.”   We are investing in employee benefits. 

 

The ramifications of that situation are many and dire.  I was at a speech where a Wall Street Journal reporter, commenting on the disastrous decline of the US Auto industry, noted that, “The fact is, General Motors is no longer an automobile company.  It is a pension and health care company that makes a few cars on the side.”   Whether we want to admit it or not, our government education (I refuse to use the “pubic education” euphamism) system is fast becoming a pension and health care system that educates a few kids (in Milwaukee about 45% of the kids they teach) on the side.

Add a comment

Name:

Comment: 250 Characters Left

620WTMJ and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the above comments or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any Public Forum.