Covid Learning Loss Could Cost American Kids $900 Billion In Lost Income
Shortly after the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) testing results showed dramatic learning loss by American youth during the coronavirus pandemic, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten attempted to grant herself absolution for the lengthy Covid lockdowns of schools. But a series of new studies demonstrate exactly how much those lockdowns could cost the next generation of American students.
The studies use both current NAEP data and studies from prior years to show that the learning loss associated with the pandemic, if not remedied, could lead to approximately $900 billion in lower earnings for public school students. Worse yet, the effects will likely hit low-income families hardest — a perfect example of how seemingly well-intentioned leftist policies have the effect of keeping poor families poor.
Long-Term Effects of Learning Loss
One of the papers by the Center for Education Policy Research used data from the Census Bureau and prior rounds of NAEP test scores taken between 1990 and 2019 to analyze the connection between test results and long-term life outcomes. Because different states’ scores on the NAEP test for eighth-grade math rose by different amounts over the past several decades, the researchers could analyze how those differences affected cohorts of students as they went through life.
The researchers examined factors such as changes in income, the likelihood of enrolling in college, teen motherhood, and incarceration. Perhaps unsurprisingly, higher test scores were associated with higher income and college enrollment, along with lower rates of teen motherhood and incarceration.
Using the results they obtained from analyzing pre-pandemic data, the researchers then extrapolated what would happen if the learning losses from the pandemic era do not get reversed. They calculated the learning loss would lead to a 1.6 percent decline in lifetime earnings.
A 1.6 percent income loss may not sound like much, but it amounts to an $800 pay cut at a $50,000 per year job — real money to most Americans. Over the course of a lifetime, the income loss would total $19,400, or enough to buy a modest car. Multiply the $19,400 by the 48 million American children attending public schools during the pandemic, and the nationwide loss of income due to learning loss could amount to a staggering $900 billion.
The harmful effects don’t end there, however, as learning loss will have other long-lasting and equally harmful effects. An editorial in The Wall Street Journal quotes one of the researchers observing that, for eighth-grade students:
College enrollment would fall 2.4%. Meantime, the number of high school dropouts would increase 3.6%, of teen mothers by 3.2%, of the unemployed by 6.6%, and of young men incarcerated by 14.2%.
These data provide all the evidence in the world why American parents should not so easily forgive, or forget, the way in which Weingarten and her allies lobbied to keep schools closed indefinitely during the pandemic.
Poor Students Worst Off
Another study analyzing this year’s NAEP results proved what many observers might intuit: The poorest areas suffered worst from learning
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