Bloomberg, WSJ: Student Aid Increases Tuition
retroworks writes "Bloomberg News makes the case that when the federal government offers tuition assistance, students apply to more expensive colleges, giving the institutions an incentive to raise tuition and a disincentive to lower it. (The Wall Street Journal has a similar article, but it's paywalled.) This reminds me of the debate over President Reagan's cuts to the Pell Grant program in the 1980s. MIT's Campus Paper 'The Tech' quoted the MIT administration as saying it had 'no idea what really will occur' when Reagan's proposal to cut Pell came to Washington. So the question is, 25 years later, do we know now? Did cuts to federal tuition assistance hurt the education of the lower income students? Did increases to Pell grants create more opportunity? Or is federal money the milkshake, and students are just the straw?"
If more money is made available to to students for education, then:
1) more people will become students (intended)
2) educational institutions will raise their prices so as to absorb all the available funds (unintended)
Maybe they rise over time anyway due to inflation and not inflating student aid reduces the amount of rise? Maybe they rise more like healthcare? Maybe there are a combination of factors that describe tuition and one of those inputs is student aid?
Or are you saying that Bill O'Reilly is so stupid as to say that when the data doesn't fit the simplest possible model then whatever that model predicts must be wrong even of other, more complex models, can come to the same conclusion?
Since the feds made student loans not eligible for inclusion in bankruptcy and the rates went up several points past the mortgage rate, I would guess that money is going to chase student loans in the future. Guaranteed payback at more than Tbills, more than the stock market average. The easy tuition loans in the future may not come from signing that Plus Loan with the government, they may come from signing that Usury Loan from the big financial houses.
If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
That's all there is to say. The banks will loan pretty much anything because they know that the debt is nonchargeable (with very rare exception), the schools know this too so they just keep raising tuition and the banks keep loaning more money. If school loans were allowed to be discharged like any other debt you would see the whole show come crumbling down like (probably more so than) the housing bubble. Tuition assistance is pretty much just the "gateway drug" of school loan debt.
Increased availability of aid and loans may very well create some tuition inflation, but I seriously doubt it is the major driving factor at public universities. It took me a while to graduate since I got called up to active duty for a while, but the tuition at the in-state public land grant university I attended nearly doubled between when I entered as a freshman and when I graduated. In 2003, tuition and fees was about 2200 USD/semester, but had ballooned to just over 4000 USD/Semester in Spring 2011. As far as I am aware, there hasn't been massive increases in the availability of aid or loans in that span (in fact, I'd argue generous private loans have become LESS available since 2008). What HAS happened is massive state budget short-falls due to economic downturns and short-sighted tax cuts. When the state is short on cash, higher education funding seems to always take the brunt of the damage in budget cuts, so public universities make up the difference by hiking tuition and/or recruiting out-of-state students.
Entirely inelastic? No, nothing is entirely inelastic. Mostly inelastic? I suspect so; the resources to put together a high-class university are scarce, and the barriers to entry are high.
Us stingy non-compassionate curmudgeonly types not swayed by cries that everyone must be educated or accusations of elitism have been saying this for a very long time.
This applies to many programs of this type. Back when I lived in Minnesota there was a big todo over welfare moms having more children simply to get an increase in welfare aid. Same same same. The programs intentions were good, but the outcome was not. And if you make this argument you are called a cold-hearted bastard. Well I guess I am a cold-hearted bastard, and all such programs should be eliminated. Flame suit on.
Conservative, mod down for violating
From TFA:
"lured"? Kind of showing their bias, aren't they?
How is getting something done in half the time a punishment?
Again, there's quite a bit of bias showing in that article.
So they're pushing for different interest rates depending upon your major?
Fuck that! How about some GRANTS for people in the hard sciences?
Stick to a single point in each point, okay? Either they're "unbearably complex" or they give too much information about family finances.
What "academic arms race"?
TFA needs an editor who is not looking to grind the same ax as the author.
This is ridiculous, I feel like I have to post some obvious correction every time some republican politician opens their mouth about money these days:
https://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2012/05/22/153316565/the-price-of-college-tuition-in-1-graphic
(Spoiler: tuition increases are not related to student loans)
Usually when I say stuff like this I try to keep it apolitical, but it's really gotten out of hand - republicans vilify every single thing that the government does nowadays (except the military, and state secrets, and domestic spying). Yes, Bloomberg is a republican politician (even if he's officially independent like Lieberman), and the WSJ is a republican mouthpiece just like every other Murdoch rag. I'll stop there, I don't want this to turn into some long rant, but come on: you can't use some twisted logic to turn lowering taxes into the solution for everything.
Not because A student has A Pell Grant, but because ALL of their students have access to ANY AMOUNT of money via government guaranteed loans.
You might as well tell us that housing prices didn't go up due to lax lending standards. Same damn thing, only now the debtors can't get out by any reasonable means.
This link leads to a study by a nonprofit group that had some different answers:
Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
College (tuition) is the next Housing Market Crash waiting to happen.
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If you ran an institution where:
1. You have more qualified applicants than availability
2. Nearly all have access to paying tuition with loans
Now you, being the bean counter - what would you do? Duh, you continually increase rates until #1 drops to a level you are uncomfortable with.
What's rent like over there?
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
I don't get why the government give aid to all majors indiscriminately. If they are going to be giving out students aid with our tax dollars, they should at least give out aid based on projected job demand. By doing so, they are reducing the number of students who graduate with no job prospects while encouraging students to fill market needs. It might also be wise to offer aid based on personality tests in order to encourage students to go into a field where they are most likely going to be useful and hopefully enjoy. This all assumes that the government should be giving out student aid. I am not so sure.
In other parts of the world, being rich sucks a whole lot more then it does in the West. Because when there's a shitload of poor people with no prospects for a future, kidnapping a moneybag, aka rich person or his relative becomes a very attractive proposition.
But yeah, let's draw direct comparisons to places that have fundamental differences AND let you live off much less because everything also costs a whole lot less... Yeah. Stupid.
The other thing this whole thread seems to have ignored so far is that even as universities are raising tuition, they've also been cutting staff, eliminating tenure, dropping courses, increasing class sizes, and capping enrollment.
My friends who are currently doing undergrad degrees have seen core classes explode in size, just in the time they've been at their schools. Many of them have been forced to take five or six years to complete their degrees solely because their college only offers some of the classes they need to graduate every other semester, and they might be too impacted to get in.
So if student aid is what's causing tuition to go up so fast, what's causing all of this other stuff?
Breakfast served all day!
Similarly, your daughter wants to be a geologist. But the best geology program is (I'm making this up) North Dakota State. You don't have the option of moving your family to North Dakota to score in-state tuition
But you DO have the option of getting private grants or scholarships for particular fields of interest.
The problem with federal loans is they float ALL boats. Anyone getting a federal grant can go anywhere, so it increases how much students pay everywhere.
Lets get back to a system where the "best and brightest" really are the ones getting more aid than someone just exploring the idea of going to college without a good reason for being there, and everyone is paying less for tuition.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Explain to me why we should compare ourselves to third-world shitholes instead of other first-world secular democracies.
Other than the fact that conservatives would rather us be a shithole because their taxes would be lower.
Hail Eris, full of mischief...
E pluribus sanguinem
Lol, as someone who has actually been told they can't finish their degree program because they cannot currently be loaned any more money (and so having gone 3.5 years and been in my senior year when told this)... I can tell you that their is no such thing as " ALL of their students have access to ANY AMOUNT of money". Their are caps and god forbid you ever hit one. It gave me a massive detour in life and now a decade later I'm still working on fixing it.... By having to go to college again. Which I can do only because I had paid on my loans (& refinanced them) and so I can be lent money again...
I don't know where people get this myth of 'unlimited' funds via loans, but it is just that.
we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise