246 THE FISCAL PROBLEM IN MISSOURI eight-months term.! Many school districts maintain a much shorter term and are therefore ineligible for rural school aid. In a recent school year 1,008 districts had school terms of less than eight months.? Assessed valuation 1s also the basis for the distribution of aid granted to consolidated districts, to high schools, and for the purpose of maintaining ninth and tenth grades. In each case it is possible for school districts to secure more money from the state if the assessed valuations are kept relatively low. In the case of high school aid, for example, there can be little incentive for a county to increase its assessed valuation to a higher level when it may mean that the high schools within the county will receive smaller apportionments from the state. It may be argued that the equalization procedure by the county and state boards will prevent a district from keeping its assessed valuation at a low level in order to obtain a larger amount of state aid than it could obtain if the valuations were increased. There may be some tendency toward such a result, but the equalization procedure is probably not sufficiently effective to prevent a tendency toward undervaluation for the purpose of obtaining state aid funds. The theory underlying the equalization grants is that there is a uniformity in valuations throughout the state and that school opportunities will be more or less equalized when the state distributesits grants foreducational purposes on the basis of assessed valuations. It is evident that the assumed uni- formity in assessed valuations cannot be achieved under the present system. The equalizations, which are often made on a flat percentage basis, can hardly result in establishing a basis so uniform that no school district will receive more or less than it should in the form of state aid. Property escap- ing taxation and different levels of assessed valuation affect so fundamentally the distribution of the four equalization grants that many injustices must result. Unquestionably these grants aid in maintaining a higher grade of educational work than would otherwise be possible. The question may well be raised. however, whether the fact that one district may 1 Revised School Laws, 1929, p. 237. ! Eightieth Report of the Public Schools of the State of Missouri, 1929, p. 322.