by Tom Sullivan
The GSV manifesto declares, "we believe the opportunity to build numerous multi-billion dollar education enterprises is finally real."
Venture capitalist, Eric Hippeau, believes the "education market is ripe for disruption."
Writing for the Nation Investigative Fund, Lee Fang details how venture capitalists and firms such as K12 Inc. view it as their mission to disrupt traditional public schools through vouchers applied to private schools, expanded charter schools, and the "next breakthrough in education technology."
[D]espite wave after wave of negative press, K12 Inc. figures as a solid investment opportunity to many. Baird Equity Research, in a giddy note to investors this year about the potential growth of K12 Inc., noted, "capturing just two million (3.5%) of the addressable market yields a market opportunity of approximately $12 billion ... Over the next three years, we believe that the company is capable of 7%+ organic revenue growth with modest margin expansion." How will it achieve this growth? According to Baird, K12 Inc.'s "competency in lobbying in new states" is "another key point of differentiation." The analyst note describes "K12's success in working closely with state policymakers and school districts to enable the expansion of virtual schools into new states or districts" as a key asset. "The company has years of experience in successfully lobbying to get legislation passed to allow virtual schools to operate," Baird concludes.In the process, they also educate children. It's there in the footnotes in 6-point type.
Look, there are friends who happily send their kids to small, community-based, parent-organized charter schools that provide them with a quality education. These aren't them. Lobbyists and campaign donations from would-be "multi-billion dollar education enterprises" will make mincemeat of those schools the way Walmart kills off mom-and-pop stores. But in the scheme of things, they're small potatoes. Privatizing public education itself is the breakthrough the Walmarts of the education industry seek.
Next year, the market size of K-12 education is projected to be $788.7 billion. And currently, much of that money is spent in the public sector. "It's really the last honeypot for Wall Street," says Donald Cohen, the executive director of In the Public Interest, a think tank that tracks the privatization of roads, prisons, schools and other parts of the economy.
Investors call that steady, recession-proof, government-guaranteed stream of public tax dollars "the Big Enchilada," as Jonathan Kozol wrote in Harpers before the market crash.
Standing in their way? "Unions, public school bureaucracies, and parents," says Hippeau. Because it sure isn't neoliberals in the Obama administration. It's hiring education industry veterans to oversee applying to educating our children Monsanto's tactic of using its GM crops to crowd out competing seed sources.
As I wrote awhile back,
From this perspective, it’s bad enough that states are not providing education on at least a not-for-profit basis. But it’s far worse than that. They’re giving it away! That’s a mortal sin. A crime against capitalism. The worst kind of creeping socialism. Hundreds of billions of tax dollars spent every year in a nonprofit community effort to educate a nation’s children, and the moguls are not skimming off the top. The horror.