By the way, let's examine the math a little more closely here:
kimiko said:
The poverty rate for children under 18 in 2003 was 17.6% (Census Bureau). Those children won't be getting educated except through charity. With average private school tuition of $4,689 in 2002 (National Center for Education Statistics), low and middle income families will hurt too. Currently only 13.1% of all charitable giving in the US goes towards education(Giving USA Foundation). Of that, almost 75% is towards higher education (Council for Aid to Education). When over 35% of charity in the US going to religious organizations, we have no reason to believe people would start donating in greater amounts to education.
First of all, let's ignore the bogus poverty values as they're placed artificially high to allow the government to hand out more boondoggles. The percentage of children in poverty by any criteria that really matters is much lower. The average of $4,689 will be too high, because lower income families will not be very likely to put their children into high-dollar schools. Giving USA reported $241 billion given in charity in 2003, so 13.1% of that is about $31.6 billion, and 25% of this is for lower education, making the total about $7.9 billion.
Now, Giving USA has consistently found that people give the same proportion of their take-home pay regardless of how that fluctuates; over half of the National Income is taken in taxes, most of which Libertarians would eliminate. So that additional income would mean over $15 billion would be given to charities funding lower education. Even if we consider the too-high average, this would pay for the entire tuition of 3.1 million American children. But not all of them would need the entire tuition covered. Someone working full-time basically needs $2.34/hr of their pay devoted to the child's education.
Now, let's consider two parents with a child. The Census Bureau in 2003 calculated the poverty level for this type of family at $14,810, or $7.40/hr full-time. (The National Center for Children in Poverty says that most children in low-income families have at least one parent who works full-time, year-round.) Subtract the $2.34 above and you get $5.06/hr, comparable to the modern Minimum Wage. So they could pay for the
average private school and still live on Minimum Wage, which would go a lot further now that they don't have to pay taxes. So a lot of people paying at the poverty level could afford even the average private school, much more so one of the cheaper ones.
Families below the poverty line, of course, would need more charitable help. But we've got $15 billion to put to it now. If a family at the poverty level can pay for the education themselves, then we can probably assume that the average poor family can pay for half of the tuition. So now, our $15 billion can educate 6.2 million children instead of just 3.1.
And all of this is with figures for a too-high poverty rate and a too-high tuition value. Reduce those to more sane values and you'll see that there should be plenty of money to cover everyone.