freediver wrote on Dec 28
th, 2009 at 1:00pm:
But they still choose to do it. Giving them this choice is a good thing. Do you think it represents a 'waste' of money for them, and they should buy siome more plasma TVs instead?
What does that have to do with the topic. You're shifting the goal posts of the topic. I don't deny those that choose to do it. I oppose the subsidy as it stands for private schools but I am not completely against a subsidy. See caveats above.
Quote:You've got that backwards. Private schools would make a furtune if education was left in private hands. The reason it cannot 'compete' is that the government provides a competing service for free, then makes those most likely to choose a private school pay far more than their fair share to support that free service, without giving them a choice. In other words, it is not operating in a capitalist economy. It is operating in parallel to a socialised one. You cannot apply two different standards to the competing systems. Hence my suggestion of a subsidy at least as high as is necessary to minimise government expenditure.
If all schools operated on a private enterprise basis there would be fewer educated people. You can apply two different standards as one is public and one is private. Public schools have a certain level of standard expected of them and a Private school has a higher standard (or so it is believed by most).
Quote:So is public education, but you are not demanding we get rid of that. Perhaps because you sift the goal posts?
LOL. That's funny. To answer the question, no. As I've stated education is a public good, so it makes sense for the public (govt if u like) to run it.
If private operators wish to also enter the market, they may on their own merits with the sole exception being the curriculum. Thus if they cannot provide the necessary capital or compete with others in the private market (given the funds they receive from their investors) then they should fail as the market dictates.
You could raise the States argument again and say they're publicly funded but even those funds are not a bottomless pit as States are revenue constrained. Also they need to recognise on startup they will competing against a public sector.
Quote:I see. The fact that education is a public good makes no distinction between public and private education. Nor do I see any way that it can guide on the choice of whether to subsidise private schools.
See my statement above. At no point have I proposed to remove wholesale subsidies from private schools.
Quote: Quote:If it cannot survive in other ways by attracting the necessary capital that is the fault of the private operators.
No Sennex. In economic terms it is the fault of the government in providing a 100% subsidy to its competitors.
See my remark above about funding.
Quote: Quote:Subsidies for those areas make it a public school thus defeating the purpose of it being a private school.
You still haven't defined that purpose, or explained how it is defeated. Unless you are suggesting that market based capitalism in competition with a 100% government subsidy is the purpose of private schooling. Is that what you think the purpose is? If so, the purpose would be defeated by a subsidy.
Private Enterprise. Once again see the remark above about funding.
Quote:I would have done it earlier, but I had great difficulty in finding the other thread.
Brief Tangent: I'm not real happy with the search feature on the forum either, it makes finding past threads and posts quite difficult but I'm doubtful that anything can be done about it.