Are Teachers Really that Underpaid?

By May 4, 2018Blog
Teachers on Strike Image

Written By:  William Mellor, Vice President at AngelouEconomics |  What is the Economic Impact of Teacher Salaries?

Declaring that teachers are underpaid is not exactly a groundbreaking revelation. However, discontent within the teacher community has reached a fever pitch. Hundreds of thousands of teachers are on strike across the country. What started in West Virginia, has since picked up in Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arizona, and Colorado. So how did we get to our current state of affairs regarding education?

teacher on strike - source http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/Teacher-Strike-Changed-Labor-in-Florida--170236516.htmlImage source:  http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/Teacher-Strike-Changed-Labor-in-Florida–170236516.html

Teachers are demanding higher salaries, better working conditions, and pension protections among other things. The question is:

How do teacher salaries stack up?

  • On average, teachers across the US earned an annual wage of $59,660 in 2017
  • Across all occupations, US earnings on average were $50,620 in 2017
  • For college educated occupations, the average annual wage jumps to $63,606

Teachers do make more than the average person, but they have also reached higher levels of education than the average person. When compared to other college educated professionals, teachers earn 6% less on average. But that’s not the real issue.

The real issue is real wages

  • Real wages for teachers have fallen by 4% since 2009
  • Real wages for all occupations have increased by 2% since 2009
  • Real wages for college educated professionals overall has increased by 4% since 2009

Real wages are a more accurate representation of actual earnings because they factor inflation into the equation. Real wages for the economy overall have increased by 2%, creating a 6% gap for real teacher salaries. When college educated professionals are isolated, that gap widens to 8%.

What gives? Miserly taxpayers?

Not likely. It turns out that after adjusting for rising student enrollment and inflation, school district spending has increased. How much of that spending goes to teachers? Approximately the same portion of the budget over time. So, what are we missing?

Teacher pensions

If spending on schools is up and the portion going to teachers is roughly the same, shouldn’t teachers be receiving more pay? It turns out that they are, just in the form of pensions payments. So, teachers should stop complaining, right? Teachers might be making lower salaries now, but they make up for it in financial security in retirement.

Not so fast. Notice above I said pension payments, not pension benefits. Traditionally, more pension payments would mean more pension benefits, but that’s not what is happening here. Pension payments have gone up because amortization costs are rising, not normal costs. In other words, more of teacher pension payments go towards paying off past debt, rather than benefitting current teachers.

cute kids on strike - image source- https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/joannaallhands/2018/02/27/arizona-teacher-strike-like-west-virginia-how-when/376865002/Image source:  https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/joannaallhands/2018/02/27/arizona-teacher-strike-like-west-virginia-how-when/376865002/

In fact, for every $10 contributed by states and districts towards pension plans, $7 dollars gets allocated toward paying down debt, while only $3 gets allocated to current teachers in the form of improved benefits.    

The takeaway?

Like so many other things in our national discourse, the challenges are complex and nuanced, and the solutions are not clear. The one thing that is clear? When teachers are on strike, they are not in the classroom, which means neither are the students. If you are in a state where teachers are striking, you might be on the lookout for this.

 

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