By Neal McCluskey on 2.8.08 @ 12:07AM
They're at it again, busy preparing to reauthorize the Higher Education Act.
Okay, Washington politicians, we get it. Harvard, Princeton, and
Yale are hoarding lots of money while tuition prices skyrocket, and
states sometimes cut funding to public colleges. That's all very
troubling, but with reauthorization of the Higher Education Act
passed in the House yesterday and a final version likely to come up
for approval by all of Congress soon, please stop throwing blame
around and address the heart of the college cost problem: your
constant lavishing of aid on students that pushes tuition up, up,
up.
By now, probably everyone has heard the righteous wailing from
Washington, led by Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), over well-endowed
institutions of higher education that don't spend their cash to
keep to tuition low.
"Parents and students have a right to expect these universities
with big endowments to end the hoarding and start the helping with
skyrocketing tuition costs," Grassley declared last month.
Grassley's assault on wealthy colleges has generated lots of
press and made for great grandstanding, and there's certainly
something wrong when ivory-tower endowments, which are tax exempt
because colleges supposedly serve the "public good," lose hardly a
tuppence in service of the public. But the fault lies with
government for giving colleges favored status, and endowment
hoarding is hardly driving tuition costs.
Just look at the number of schools with big endowments. A few
weeks ago, Sen. Grassley and Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT) sent a letter
requesting information to every college and university with an
endowment over $500 million. How many schools was that? Just 136,
or about 3 percent of the nation's nearly 4,300 colleges and
universities. That's hardly enough to make much difference on
overall average tuition levels.
Despite the small number of schools being directly harassed over
their endowments, most higher education lobbyists are on high
alert, especially against threats from Grassley and others to make
colleges spend 5 percent of their endowments annually.
Unfortunately, to protect themselves colleges and their Washington
defenders are pointing at an even more popular scapegoat for
rampant tuition inflation than Harvard and Yale: tight-fisted
states.
"A primary reason that tuition has been rising is that state
funding has been flat," Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) told a
gathering of higher education officials in Washington last week,
exhorting them to close the "communication gap" between themselves
and politicians on Capitol Hill.
But Washington pols, as the HEA reauthorization bill proves,
have been hearing that message loud and clear. If the bill passed
yesterday is enacted, the federal government would withhold funds
from any state that cut higher education spending below its
previous five-year average. In other words, states would have to
spend taxpayer money to make taxpayer money.
Sadly, just like the endowment blow-up, blaming tuition
inflation on impecunious state spending is a dodge.
State financing of public institutions, for one thing, has no
direct effect on the nation's roughly 2,600 private colleges or
their tuition prices. Moreover, state spending on higher education
hasn't actually been flat. According to the latest federal "Digest
of Education Statistics," after adjusting for inflation state
higher-education expenditures rose from $46.8 billion in academic
year 1990-91 to $53.9 billion in 2003-04, a 15 percent increase.
Despite that, the average real cost of in-state tuition and fees at
public four-year institutions rose 86 percent in that time, from
$2,460 to $4,587.
So much for the cheap states theory. But what, then, is the real
cause of the college cost crisis?
There are many cost-driving excesses in higher education --
luxurious dorms, unused classroom space, growing bureaucracies,
expensive academic journals, and the list goes on -- that are
intermediate causes of the college cost problem. They are all,
however, undergirded by a single reality: You can't charge an arm
and a leg unless people can pay it, and to curry favor with
colleges, kids, and parents Washington ensures that those limbs
keep coming, taking them from taxpayers and giving them to students
and schools.
The growth in federal student aid makes this clear. According to
data from the College Board, real federal aid -- including grants,
loans, and tax credits -- ballooned from $48.7 billion in the
1996-97 academic year to almost $86.3 billion in 2006-07, a 77
percent leap. On a per-pupil basis, aid per full-time equivalent
student -- most of which came through Washington -- rose from
$6,627 to $9,499, a 43 percent increase. Meanwhile, the per-pupil
cost of tuition, fees, room and board rose 29 percent at private
four-year schools, from $25,031 to $32,307, and 41 percent at
public four-year institutions, from $9,657 to $13,589. In other
words, college prices kept rising because aid made sure they
could.
So who are the real culprits behind higher education's
ever-higher price tag? Not endowment hoarders or cheap states, but
the Washington politicians who blame everyone else for the problems
that they themselves have caused.
topics:
Education