St. Louis Schools Lost $260 Million to Economic Development Subsidies
According to a report from Good Jobs First, St. Louis' public schools took the brunt of the loss at nearly 65 percent of the total.

Governments love to give out taxpayer money to private companies in an attempt to spur economic development. But what about the state and local agencies who miss out on that revenue? A new report suggests that schools bear the brunt of the loss.
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) is a private independent organization that "establishes accounting and financial reporting standards for U.S. state and local governments." One such recommendation, issued as GASB Statement No. 77, "requires state and local governments to disclose key information about their tax abatement agreements," in which state and local governments agree to reduce an individual person's or company's taxes, typically in exchange for some sort of economic development project.
Good Jobs First, a nonprofit organization that supports transparency in economic development deals, used these tax-abatement disclosures to examine their effect on school funding, specifically in St. Louis.
"Local governments in Missouri have complied with Statement 77 (unlike some other states), making it straightforward to track revenue lost to economic development tax breaks and compare among jurisdictions," wrote Good Jobs First research analyst Anya Gizis in a new report. This allowed Gizis and two co-authors to compile financial disclosures from St. Louis Public Schools, plus 23 school districts from suburban St. Louis County, and compare the lost tax revenues in each.
"All told, St. Louis area schools lost at least $260.7 million to tax abatements in the six fiscal years 2017 through 2022," the report found. Even this number is likely an undercount, as not every district submitted numbers for each of the six years.
St. Louis Public Schools (SLPS), the city's school district, saw by far the biggest losses: $167.9 million over six years, nearly 65 percent of the countywide total. The report calculates a per-pupil loss of $1,634—a staggering amount for a district that spends an estimated $17,000 per student. According to the report, SLPS's student body is also nearly 88 percent black, and 100 percent of students qualify for free or reduced-price meals due to low household income.
Meanwhile, the suburban Rockwood R-VI School District—whose students are 75 percent white and only 8.5 percent of whom qualify for reduced-price meals—only lost $2.2 million, a comparatively paltry funding loss of $18 per student.
The report posits that poor and minority students are most negatively affected by such abatement schemes. "On average, white students lose $179 per year, while Black students lose more than three times that—$610 per year," its authors write. "After [SLPS], the second hardest-hit group of students are those with disabilities. The Special District of St. Louis County, which serves children with special needs residing in suburban districts, loses $1,148 per student per year."
The report further breaks down the numbers by the types of economic subsidy programs that they supported. Of the $260.7 million in total lost revenue, $69.37 million went to tax-increment financing (TIF), including $64.18 million from SLPS alone.
New development projects tend to drive up property values, leading to an increase in property taxes. But under TIF, the city or county government subsidizes the development by borrowing against that future higher revenue; local services that are funded through property taxes, like public schools, road maintenance, and police and fire departments, get none of the extra cash.
The East-West Gateway Council of Governments, the local metropolitan planning organization, released a report in 2011 on the use of TIF in the St. Louis area. It found that the use of incentives like TIF "has been ineffective both as a way to increase regional sales tax revenue or to produce a significant increase in quality jobs." It further found that "the use of TIF and other tax incentives, while positive for the incentive-using municipality, has negative impacts on neighboring municipalities." In other words, cities and counties that use TIF steal jobs away from neighboring communities by incentivizing employers to move; jobs aren't created, they're just shifted around.
The Good Jobs First report includes several policy recommendations—for example, that "St. Louis Public Schools be given veto power or voting power on the St. Louis TIF Commission proportional to their share of TIF revenue," allowing it to decide where that money gets spent. It also suggests that "every school district's share of the property tax should simply be 100% shielded from abatements."
A better idea would be to allow everyone to opt out: Taxpayers choose where to spend their money, private companies are responsible for funding their own development projects, and state and local governments stop meddling in the affairs of either.
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On average, white students lose $179 per year, while Black students lose more than three times that—$610 per year," its authors write.
Since there is not a shred of evidence that increasing per-pupil spending improves educational outcomes, the disparity is irrelevant. There are well-funded schools all over blue cities like New York, Chicago and Los Angeles where only a trivial percentage of students can read or do math at grade level.
Why is one color capitalized and the other not?
because White people are under fire in this country (but I am sure you knew that).
imagine feeling bad for a substandard, corrupt school system losing money while tilting at windmills trying to turn lead into gold.
For a district to lose money, would mean that spending per student decreased. That isn’t what happened here – the districts lost out on possible increases, that’s different.
Year-over-year, as these development programs were put in place, did school budgets – per-student – increase or decrease.
The thing to remember here is that the money was never going to the school districts – the money these districts would have gotten only would have been collected if the new development projects went forward WITHOUT the special tax treatments… The thing is without the special tax treatments the development projects never would have gone forward.
Here’s what I mean – imagine Ford getting a $100M tax deal to build a new factory, and if that $100M let’s say $15M would have gone to the school districts. That looks like a possible $15M loss for school districts, but without the $100M deal Ford would never build the plant… Build the plant or not, the school district isn’t getting the $15M. The ONLY difference is if Ford builds the plant and then ten, fifteen years later, when the tax savings end, the school district could POTENTIALLY start seeing more funding once taxes are collected.
Municipalities offer these tax deals to induce development in areas where development otherwise would never happen.
Most studies place economic development handouts below work force skills,utlity costs, transportation costs and access to suppliers.There are many negative spillover effects that government subsidies exaggerate.
Because Reason is racist.
"St. Louis Schools Lost $260 Million to Economic Development Subsidies."
Ah, yes,
American public education.
The most expensive baby sitting service in the world.
Without the subsidies, there would have been no development, no $260M for the schools - the difference is residents got jobs, economic activity came to the area, and I just bet you, every year the school spending per-child increased, rather than decreased because of these imagined "losses".
The $260M in increased school funds only comes to the schools if the development goes forward without the tax subsidy, the truth is without the subsidies the economic development doesn't happen - either way, the school district never, ever had a chance to get the $260M they claim they lost...
American public education is actually pretty good...depending on which segment of the population you look at.
in the 2015 PISA assessment (which is, of course, the last time I am able to find the results collated by race), White Americans were 2nd place in literacy results worldwide, only behind Hong Kong. It's Blacks and Hispanics (according to all objective statistics) that lower the average for the country.
So, where would you rather send your kids to school, a public one or a private one?
i'm more concerned about the constituent population of the school and what kind of neighborhood/locality it's in.
St. Louis City public schools already spends 3x more per student than your average private high school, with significantly worse results.
The logic in this report reminds me of the logic that had AOC lobby against the Amazon headquarters in Brooklyn that was partially funded with $2BN in tax benefits over 10 years... She demanded that the $2BN be given to public schools - she thought there was $2BN just sitting around that she could spend.
This report makes the same mistake, treating subsidies as if they were real cash.
There is really no difference between the nutty far left and the nutty far right.
A bunch of criminals fighting over their stolen pot-a-gold.
None of this should be surprising. Any city that relies on tax abatements and developers for internal growth is gonna kill its tax base and turn corrupt.
I think that all of the city-owned vacant properties have done more than their fair share of killing their tax base.
Those are exactly what should impel a city to change from property tax to land tax. The land tax spurs development on a parcel because the tax stays the same. It doesn't go up with a building/improvement. A reasonably large enough area of muni-owned vacant lots can change the zoning from (most likely) single-family residential to low-density multi-use or something. That means opening up the choices for any owner of a single lot. The combo gets those lots out of useless and into taxpayer.
Vacant lots don't kill a tax base. The land doesn't disappear. Just need to increase user-demand for those lots without turning into what St Louis is apparently doing - arbitrary, big-project, crony deals that rob others
How exactly would a 'land tax' help raise revenue when the problem is city-owned vacant properties?
The problem isn't that people wouldn't be developing these properties, it's that the CITY OWNS THEM and has no viable plan to disperse of them. They are UNAVAILABLE for development.
They would be available if anyone wanted to buy them. No one does.
Just looking at where that muni-owned land is. It is not a mere ownership problem. eg there are 500 LRA properties in a neighborhood called The Ville (population now 1400). A center of the black middle-class during segregation. Chuck Berry and Dick Gregory were born there. Sonny Liston, Arthur Ashe, Tina Turner families 'escaped' the South to there. The only hospital in St Louis that accepted blacks was there. One of two high schools for blacks in St Louis during segregation and the first anywhere west of the Mississippi. Linked by streetcar to downtown and with the sorts of commercial businesses that existed pre-zoning and during segregation.
What killed it was a highway/downtown/tenement razing project - then a massive failed public housing project closer to downtown - both of which cut off access to commercial downtown and to highways. Redlining and residential-only zoning eliminated buyers and so the entire neighborhood died. Obviously land ownership then reverts to the muni.
The only way to fix what killed the neighborhood is to either:
a)undo the core causes - may not be possible now because St Louis is now suburb/car-driven.
b)get rid of the stuff like zoning and land speculation and developer/cronyism that closes off options for the small-scale growth and development that made the neighborhood a cohesive village to begin with. Now in a post-segregated world.
The worst possible thing is bureaucrats, cronies, and big developers all looking to make a deal.
"...Vacant lots don’t kill a tax base. The land doesn’t disappear. Just need to increase user-demand for those lots without turning into what St Louis is apparently doing – arbitrary, big-project, crony deals that rob others..."
Social engineering via tax structure; thanks JFucked.
Even worse - it looks like tax abatements are mostly for single-family homes. 3144 of them v 500 commercial v 105 multi-family v 55 multi-use. Mostly in the near downtown area. So they're gonna increase traffic, hugely reduce long-term land value/acre, probably reduce housing units, increase voting pressure for a city to instead act like a suburb, increase pressure for mega-scale zoning.
St Louis looked like one of those declining Rust Belt cities that might have a chance of turning around if they instead aimed for an influx of yutes. But man those cities just can't stop being stuck on stupid.
Revenue lost to the public tax-funded school system is a GOOD thing, not a BAD thing, although it says a lot about the current state of affairs that I would cheer on crony tax breaks because they are destroying the public schools.
Only in the minds of The Governmental Accounting Standards Board can a school lose something it never had.
I don't know which is worse, the 'governmental' part, of the 'accounting' part.
This is bullshit The 23/24 St Louis public school budget of $480 million is up 20% from the 20/21 budget of $400 million. And I guarantee you that they are delivering worse results than ever.
If only their budget could be cut in half: education would greatly improve.
the feds handed out $190 billion nationwide to reopen schools post covid ... this article is a complete farce ... the public school district near me is scrambling to spend the last $90 million of the windfall they received
The schools lost nothing. It’s not their money.
Libertarians for taxation brought to you by moron Joe Lancaster.
Neighborhoods with good schools don't need to spend money on tax abatements to attract business. Bad ones do. There are literally 100s of abandoned homes and lots in downtown St. Louis city that are free for anyone to take if they want to develop. No one does.
It's really hard to say anything was lost, because that development would likely not have happened in the first place. Yes, there is a lot of shenanigans when it comes to this stuff - Stan Kroenke made a ton of money with TIF schemes in the St. Louis area (and then moved the Rams to LA) basically building strip mall after strip mall, constantly abandoning the old ones in favor of new development.
St. Louis public schools have a 73% graduation rate with 18% proficient in reading and 10% proficient in math. Reason thinks the local government should take more money from people and businesses to fund failing government schools. Get bent.
https://www.niche.com/k12/d/saint-louis-public-schools-mo/academics/