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Education

Smart Investments in Education are Needed for Economic Growth and Competitiveness

This is the latest in a weekly series of talking points from CAP’s Doing What Works team showing how we can make smart budget decisions that boost government efficiency and effectiveness.

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Teacher Margarita Hernandez leads a group of preschoolers with an outdoor art project at a Head Start program in Hillsboro, Oregon. We receive $13 in social benefits for every $1 invested in early childhood education and development, studies show. (AP/Greg Wahl-Stephens)
Teacher Margarita Hernandez leads a group of preschoolers with an outdoor art project at a Head Start program in Hillsboro, Oregon. We receive $13 in social benefits for every $1 invested in early childhood education and development, studies show. (AP/Greg Wahl-Stephens)

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The strength of the American economy depends on a well-educated workforce. And yet the United States struggles with persistent achievement gaps facing minority and low-income students. Smart and efficient federal investments in education will improve student achievement and put our economy on the path to sustained and robust growth. Here’s how:

Don’t spend scarce federal money where it’s not needed

  • Federal education funds should go to students with extra needs, including low-income students, students with disabilities, and English language learners.
  • That money should be used to close vast disparities in educational achievement between low-income and minority students, and their more affluent peers.
  • We should use federal taxpayer dollars to encourage states to direct more money to school districts with many low-income students.

Education funding should be efficient and effective, emphasizing returns on investment

  • We should require districts to report real expenditures at the school level, rigorously evaluate state and local results on that spending—and make future funding decisions accordingly.
  • Some ineffective or outdated federal programs were already eliminated in the 2011 budget, and President Obama is right to want to consolidate overlapping programs.
  • We should explore innovative funding strategies that reward performance, such as pay-for-success contracts or social impact bonds.

Investing in education now will pay off in the future, many times over

  • Our economy would be as much as $2 trillion bigger if we had closed the international achievement gap between the United States and higher-performing countries.
  • Consider: If 50 percent of 2008 high school dropouts in the largest metro areas had graduated, they would earn a combined $4 billion more every year.
  • We receive $13 in social benefits for every $1 invested in early childhood education and development, studies show.

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Diana Epstein is a Senior Education Policy Analyst at the Center for American Progress.

The positions of American Progress, and our policy experts, are independent, and the findings and conclusions presented are those of American Progress alone. A full list of supporters is available here. American Progress would like to acknowledge the many generous supporters who make our work possible.

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