This study examines the impact of the Great Recession on public education finance and employment. Five major themes emerge:
- First, nearly 300,000 school employees lost their jobs.
- Second, schools that were heavily dependent financially on state governments were particularly vulnerable to the recession.
- Third, local revenues from the property tax actually increased during the recession, primarily because millage rates rose in response to declining property values.
- Fourth, inequality in school spending rose sharply during the Great Recession. We need to be very cautious about this result. School spending inequality has risen steadily since 2000; the trend in inequality we see in the 2008–13 period is very similar to the trend we see in the 2000–08 period.
- Fifth, the federal government's efforts to shield education from some of the worst effects of the recession achieved their major goal.
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