Not exact matches
Our analysis finds that for children from low - income families, increasing
per -
pupil spending by 10 percent in all 12 school - age years reduces the
annual incidence of poverty in adulthood by 6.1 percentage points.
Investigating the causal effect of school
spending increases generated by the passage of SFRs, we conclude that increasing
per -
pupil spending yields large improvements in educational attainment, wages, and family income, and reductions in the
annual incidence of adult poverty for children from low - income families.
While we find only small effects for children from nonpoor families, for low - income children, a 10 percent increase in
per -
pupil spending each year for all 12 years of public school is associated with roughly 0.5 additional years of completed education, 9.6 percent higher wages, and a 6.1 - percentage - point reduction in the
annual incidence of adult poverty.
It is true that on average, an additional $ 1000 in
per -
pupil spending is associated with an
annual gain in achievement of one - tenth of 1 percent of a standard deviation.
For poor children, a twenty percent increase in
per -
pupil spending each year for all 12 years of public school is associated with nearly a full additional year of completed education, 25 percent higher earnings, and a 20 percentage - point reduction in the
annual incidence of poverty in adulthood.
The Census Bureau collects and analyzes states»
annual attendance figures and
per -
pupil spending amounts for the Education Department's National Center for Education Statistics.
I started by collecting
annual per pupil spending and student enrollment data for 2013 from the United Nations» Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics» (UIS) database.ii Per pupil expenditure is in constant USD (U.S. dollar
per pupil spending and student enrollment data for 2013 from the United Nations» Education, Scientific, and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics» (UIS) database.ii
Per pupil expenditure is in constant USD (U.S. dollar
Per pupil expenditure is in constant USD (U.S. dollars).
Schools raise extra funds through government grants and community donations, which allows them to
spend on average an additional $ 1,100 to $ 1,500
per pupil above and beyond usual school costs for longer school days, weeks and years and for
annual field trips and costly facilities.
K - 12
spending per pupil (Comprehensive Costs from
Annual Reports
per DPI Basic Facts) for 2008 - 09 ranged from $ 10,293 in Elk Mound to $ 23,679 in Phelps (a high / low ratio of 2.3 to 1) with a state average of $ 12,346.
The median district
spends 4.16 percent of its total
annual expenditures on transportation ($ 246.06
per pupil).
In fact, NEA's 2016
Annual Rankings & Estimates Report ranked the state 23th in
per -
pupil funding, estimating that Oregon
spent, on average, about $ 11,127
per student in 2015.
A 20 % «increase in
per -
pupil spending each year for all 12 years of public school leads to 0.9 more completed years of education, 25 percent higher earnings, and a 20 percentage - point reduction in the
annual incidence of adult poverty.»