
Michigan radically altered its school finance system in 1994. The new plan, called Proposal A, significantly increased state aid to the lowest-spending school districts and limited future increases in spending in the highest-spending ones, abolishing local discretion over school spending. I investigate the impact of Proposal A on the distribution of resources and educational outcomes. I analyze the differential effects on the lowest-spending and the highest-spending districts, highlighting the role of local discretion, which has so far been neglected in the literature. I also provide important evidence on the effect of spending on academic performance. Proposal A was quite successful in reducing interdistrict spending disparities. There was also a significant positive effect on student performance in the lowest-spending districts as measured in state tests. However, the constraints on future increases in spending may have had a negative effect on student performance in the highest-spending districts.
K-12 Education, School Finance, Inequality and Redistribution, Academic Performance, school finance reform, resource equalization, academic performance, Michigan, jel: jel:I2, jel: jel:H4, jel: jel:H7, jel: jel:I21, jel: jel:I22
K-12 Education, School Finance, Inequality and Redistribution, Academic Performance, school finance reform, resource equalization, academic performance, Michigan, jel: jel:I2, jel: jel:H4, jel: jel:H7, jel: jel:I21, jel: jel:I22
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