A reader responds to an earlier post on the question of whether schools can operate successfully as a market:
The reader comment you include in your post points to one of the essential conflicts underlying the whole school “reform” debate. The conflict is this: what system produces better outcomes – community decision-making, or market competition? The answer, of course, depends a lot on what kind of outcome you are trying to get.
In the marketplace, businesses strive to offer products and services that are sufficiently attractive to consumers to gain them business but cheap enough to ensure an economic return to the owners of the business. (This, as others have pointed out, is the key problem with for-profit educational entities, since even legally their first responsibility is to their shareholders and not their “customers,” the students. It’s an unavoidable conflict of interest.) Private firms do not maximize quality; they balance quality and cost to maximize profit under current market conditions. This is how the system works, and in many domains it works pretty well.
However, there are conditions under which the market does not produce goods or services in the type or amount that society desires – economists call these “market failures.” Classic examples of this are public services like police, fire, and, yes, education. Even things like electric, water and gas services are typically either publicly owned or else operated as a heavily regulated public utility. Education is usually cited as a market failure because there is a public benefit to universal education that would not be given value in the private market. Education would not be as high-quality for most families nor as accessible if it were operated solely by the private market. Education also brings long-term societal benefits that are hard to measure financially and would not be incorporated into a private firm’s economic calculation.
To hear many education “reformers” speak about this topic, you would think that “market failures” were simply a figment of the liberal imagination. Sadly, they are the ones who are deluded.
Another facet of this debate is the question of competition – and competition need not only be among private firms. In the market, competition is presumed to generate the balance between cost and quality desired by consumers. This depends on two things:
1) Consumers have sufficient, accurate information to decide which products most fit their needs; and
2) Consumers can switch from product to product, provider to provider, without much disruption.
Neither of these things hold in the field of education. Parents, and students, have valid opinions about schools, but they are not able to judge what the ultimate impact of a school will be on themselves twenty or thirty years down the road. This is why long-term reputation is important for schools, since we must rely on a history of other people’s children to judge what is likely to happen to our own. Research shows that even standardized tests – at least as currently conceived – do not accurately capture the impact of a quality education on children. (See the Perry Preschool study, the High/Scope program.) So the “grades” we have been giving schools are based on narrow criteria and do not offer the kind of information parents really want – will this school help my child live a fulfilled and comfortable life?
The reader quote addresses the second point. Market competition does not have its greatest impact by inducing firms to change their products or services; it accelerates the rise of firms with desired products and encourages the closure of firms that fail to please customers. Schumpeter called this the “creative destruction” of the free market. This may be ok for toothpaste manufacturers, or cell phone companies, but does the constant turnover of schools and education providers really end up helping individual students? I think that most researchers would say that this greatly damages a student’s chances for success. It also upends families and communities.
Finally, the last problem with the competition model is that outcomes are determined solely by those who are participating in the market at that moment. But we already recognize, as a country, the important public benefits of education. The reason behind democratic governance of public schools is to allow the entire community a say in the running of an institution that affects the entire community. This public aspect is entirely missing from the “reform” argument, for reasons that have more to do with ideology than with educational benefit.

As if we had to look very hard for cases where markets in fail in those very domains where the Church of the Invisible Hand keeps on preaching its success in spite of all evidence to the contrary.
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It is time to realize that we are dealing with an irrational belief system, one that will continue to propagate itself like a mental virus despite every failure of its dogmas and prophecies. There is a large literature in psychology and sociology on such phenomena, going back to Max Weber, at least. It is time to see the sickness for what it is, before it destroys civilized society.
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Check out this 13 minute PBS documentary! This is what it is all about. Not markets. Not test scores. Do these teachers and administrators look at their students as a “customer”? Teaching is a profoundly human experience which involves engaging with students to show them things they did not know they could do!
The Middle School Moment
A new PBS documentary illuminates success of a Bronx school
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/education/dropout-nation/middle-school-moment/
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I watched that a yesterday. What a wonderful story and what a beautiful young girl and I think that was a real PUBLIC school.
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Thank you for sharing this with us. I agree very strongly with the idea of intervention. When I taught, I had a student who was consistently truant. With help from the Truant Officer at my school, we were able to work with my student and we were able to get her to attend school on a regular basis. When I was about to leave
teaching, this student informed me that she was planning to attend
Jr. College after finishing High School.
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Many who believe that market forces will fix everything erroneously equate the “free market” or the “Invisible Hand” with a “perfect market” which Wikipedia defines as:
“In economics, a perfect market is defined by several conditions, collectively called perfect competition. Among these conditions are
Perfect market information
No participant with market power to set prices
No barriers to entry or exit
Equal access to production technology
The mathematical theory is called general equilibrium theory. On the assumption of Perfect Competition, and some technical assumptions about the shapes of supply and demand curves, it is possible to prove that a market will reach an equilibrium in which supply for every product or service, including labor, equals demand at the current price. This equilibrium will be a Pareto optimum, meaning that nobody can be made better off by exchange without making someone else worse off.[1]
Share and foreign exchange markets are commonly said to be the most similar to the perfect market. The real estate market is an example of a very imperfect market. Note that the conditions for Perfect Competition mean that a perfect market cannot be unregulated, since these preconditions for market function cannot at the same time be products of the market, yet must be provided somehow.
Another characteristics of a Perfect Market is normal profits, just enough to induce enough participants to stay in the market to satisfy customer demand. The least efficient producer may have very small profits, and be unable, for example, to pay dividends to shareholders, while more efficient producers have larger profits.
This attribute of perfect markets has profound political and economic implications, as many participants assume or are taught that the purpose of the market is to enable participants to maximize profits. It is not. The purpose of the market is to efficiently allocate resources and to maximize the welfare of consumers and producers alike. The market therefore regards excess profits, or economic rents, as a signal of inefficiency, that is of market failure, which is to say, not achieving a Pareto optimum.”
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The Perfect Market, however, doesn’t exist it is theoretical only. Wikipedia also includes a discussion on Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand, complete with criticisms and limitations of that theory. In reality, the concept of markets, whether free, invisible, perfect, or imperfect, is complicated and complex and obviously not understood by the masses or those pushing for educational “reform” via the “market.”
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I agree about the distinction between “normal profits” and what economic theory calls “economic profits” (which indicate that the particular market is ripe for entry of competing firms until the returns from investment in that market are effectively equal to other alternatives). It’s true that markets don’t maximize profits – markets don’t “do” anything, other than structure the relationship between buyers and sellers.
However, firms *do* act to maximize (“normal”) profits (or return on invested capital). In the real world, what that means is that the legal responsibility of management is to put the interests of their shareholders first. Hence the conflict: a private educational management firm *cannot* put the interests of its students first, since that would violate their legal duty.
All this gets us away from the main problems of using the market competition metaphor to discuss education (very popular in my home state of Michigan just now).
1) Markets in education don’t work well because participants (especially parents and students) don’t have enough information to be sure which options would benefit them most. That’s because what we care about is not test scores, or even first year college grades and the like, but long-term personal and social success and good citizenship. That means our options need to have a 20-30 year track record before we can judge their success. There are strong indications in research that standardized tests do not capture those long-term effects very well. That means that choosing high-quality education models requires expertise and long-term experience. New “market entrants” can advertise and claim to be the best thing since sliced bread, but they can’t truly prove it for decades.
(Their efforts to drum up business represent a deadweight loss to society.)
2) Markets in education are insufficient, because they do not include the overriding public purpose and public interest in educational outcomes. Educational quality is not simply a matter to be settled between “education service providers” and parents. Our entire society has a critical stake in educational outcomes, and public governance and funding of education is a very effective way to make sure the interests of the entire community are represented.
These are “academic” arguments, but they have real-world consequences. After all, much of this “reform” agenda is based on ideas (ideology) rather than evidence. Ideas matter, for good or ill.
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http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/comment/2012/07/barack-mitt-and-adam-smith.html?mbid=gnep&google_editors_picks=true
Understanding Adam Smith and the Invisible Hand
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The New Testament is full of many fine sentiments, too, but look at the mess that some people make of that.
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The market model does not describe the realities of the game that capital corporations play. The market myth is not a description of the game — it is one of the gambits, one of the bluffing positions in the game.
A better understanding of the role that Fundamentally Irrational Beliefs (FIBs) play in economic games can be found in the work of Max Weber, beginning with The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.
Links to sources and some rambling discussion can be found here.
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“Many a small thing can be made large by the right kind of advertising,” wrote Mark Twain. Conversely, the right kind of advertising is not necessarily what is right for students and their education. My students’ education is no small thing, but taking credit for student learning feels filthy. Effective teaching and learning are intimate experiences. Mass marketing and personal learning are antithetical. Trying to sell public education to the public feels like selling out.
http://oneteachersperspective.blogspot.com/2012/07/selling-public-education-feels-like.html
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