Home Coronavirus Coverage Good morning. The C.D.C. makes the case for masks. The West Coast gets a rainy reprieve. And U.S. higher education faces troubles bigger than the virus. – The New York Times

Good morning. The C.D.C. makes the case for masks. The West Coast gets a rainy reprieve. And U.S. higher education faces troubles bigger than the virus. – The New York Times

28
0

The coronavirus has caused severe budget problems for American higher education. But many colleges’ financial troubles are much larger than the virus. They have been building for years and stem, above all, from a breakdown in this country’s hodgepodge system of paying for higher education.

Given the importance of higher education — for scientific research, entrepreneurship and ultimately American living standards — I want to use today’s newsletter to talk about this breakdown.

The current system arose after World War II and depended on three sources of money: students (and their parents); the federal government; and state governments. Of those, state governments were supposed to provide the most money. That’s why many Americans attend something known as a state college.

Over time, though, state officials came to a realization. If they cut their higher-education budgets, colleges could make up the shortfall by raising tuition. Many other state-funded programs, like health care, highways, prisons and K-12 education, have no such alternative.

“In every economic downturn since the 1980s, states have disproportionately cut college and university budgets,” Kevin Carey writes in a new Washington Monthly article that offers an exceptionally clear description of the problem. Since 2008, states have cut inflation-adjusted per-student spending by 13 percent, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

View Original Source

tags:

LEAVE YOUR COMMENT

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *