Investigate The Real Cartel
Idaho’s Attorney General Lawrence Wasden ordered five oil companies to explain why they sold their products in Idaho at “extraordinarily high prices.” While gas prices dipped in below $2.50 in some parts of the country, people in Idaho are still paying around $3.00 a gallon.
If the Attorney General really wants to investigate a price-fixing cartel, he ought to be looking at Idaho’s public school monopoly. According to the Idaho State Department of Education, taxpayers are charged over $8,000 per student per year. In contrast, Idaho’s private schools are providing the service for around $4,000 a year. Given that K-12 public education is a $2 billion dollar a year industry, it looks like Idaho taxpayers are being overcharged $1 billion dollars a year. Idaho has around 470,000 households. If taxpayers could keep this billion dollars, each household would have an extra $2,127 to spend each year.
So what is the real cartel problem: being overcharged 50 cents on a gallon of gas, or $4,000 on tuition? Fortunately, gas prices are subject to competitive markets and reflect relative supply and demand. Unfortunately for taxpayers, public schools are protected from economic or political pressure. This is why spending increased 48 percent while enrollment increased only 4.8 percent over the past eight years.
If the Attorney General really cares about protecting Idahoans from price gouging, he should let the market take care of gas prices and focus his attention and taxpayer resources on eliminating the public school cartel.
