Article
Finds "Inequitable Equilibrium" in State Finance Systems
"Inequitable
Equilibrium," a forthcoming article
(Indiana Law Review 36, Spring 2003) by Jeffrey Metzler, a clerk for Judge Diana
Motz of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, examines the relationship
between changes in school finance systems for the purpose of improving equity
and the actual degree of equity achieved. Using statistical analysis and
voluminous data from all 50 states to determine such measures of equity as the
wealth neutrality score, targeting score, coefficient of variation, and McLloone
index, the author finds that the methods states normally use to try to improve
equity only provide temporary solutions, if any. Even some states, such as Washington,
that have adopted full state funding or guaranteed tax yield approaches, have
gradually regressed into inequity. The reason for this, Metzler asserts, is that
a typical state school finance system is characterized by an inequitable equilibrium.
Due to advocacy efforts, legislators may move away from that equilibrium, but
often later pass laws, such as limits on taxes, that effectively invalidate the
laws designed to increase equity. The author concludes that state education
finance programs can be easily manipulated in ways that significantly impact the
equitable distribution of resources. As a result, changes in legislation that
are facially more equitable may, in practice, have little or no effect on the
distribution of state aid to local school districts. Furthermore, because the
distribution of resources often represents the balance of political power in the
state, legislators and governors are often under considerable pressure to maintain
the existing equlibrium, even if it is inequitable. Thus, those interested
in achieving meaningful reform must either find a way to change the political
equilibrium, or rely on courts
to impose solutions on resistant legislatures. Prepared May 2, 2003 |