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Writing for the Economic Policy Institute, Hilary Wething explains why framing voucher programs as “school choice” is not accurate. 

[D]iverting public funds away from public K–12 schools and toward private schools does not guarantee educational opportunities will be expanded for all students—and this is especially true in rural communities. Most obviously, because students in rural communities often don’t have a private school option and therefore cannot use the vouchers, state voucher programs—which are financed by all the taxpayers in a state—amount to an education subsidy for wealthy urban families at the expense of strong public schools. Moreover, for rural areas that can support multiple school systems, voucher programs introduce a potentially large cost for the students that remain in public schools, as any sharp drop in public school enrollment will raise the fixed cost per pupil of running schools. For example, school facilities and staff that are efficient for 1,000 students in a school may no longer be efficient if enrollment were to drop to 800 or 900.

Voucher programs work like this: Parents who wish to send their kid to private school can receive public funding to cover part of the tuition or education-related expenses, rather than paying out of pocket. In states with vouchers programs, this added cost to government of paying for private educational expenses makes a big dent in state budgets—see examples herehere, and here. These programs also often entail fraud and abuse of funds and strip away funding for public schools. As a share of K–12 budgets, voucher spending accounted for as much as 26% in 2025, squeezing public schools of sorely needed funds. Moreover, recent reports have documented accounts of voucher funding getting used for high-end concert tickets and rideshare apps like Uber and Lyft. For wealthy parents in urban districts who were already planning to send their kids to private school, these slippery regulations and extra funding for education expenses are a feature, not a bug, of voucher programs. Vouchers are disproportionately taken up by students already attending private school, compared with those who consider a private school option when voucher laws get passed in their state.

For students in rural areas with no private school option, voucher programs simply mean there is less to spend on public schools, which leads to teacher shortages, fewer educational opportunities, and worse building maintenance. In rural communities with homeschooling or private school options, voucher programs impose an added cost to public education when students transition from public to private school.

Read the full post here.