gribbler, you completely misunderstand the justification for public schools.
1) the wealth redistributed is earmarked FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CHILDREN, not the parents; because of the agency problem (parents cannot always be trusted to act fully in the interests of the child) the redistributed wealth must be earmarked towards something that benefits the child. Paternalism (I know what you want better than you know what you want) does not enter into it, except in that we don't give the money directly to the children.
2) for separate reasons, we have a (mostly) state-run primary education system because we think that the state is better than the market at providing education services. Contrast this with e.g. Medicare, where we redistribute money but let the market provide actual medical services.
1) the wealth redistributed is earmarked FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CHILDREN, not the parents; because of the agency problem (parents cannot always be trusted to act fully in the interests of the child) the redistributed wealth must be earmarked towards something that benefits the child. Paternalism (I know what you want better than you know what you want) does not enter into it, except in that we don't give the money directly to the children.
2) for separate reasons, we have a (mostly) state-run primary education system because we think that the state is better than the market at providing education services. Contrast this with e.g. Medicare, where we redistribute money but let the market provide actual medical services.
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