With college education costs rising every year, it is not
surprising that elected officials are increasingly turning to taxpayers to help
pay the bills.As demand and enrollment
have also increased sharply, traditional models of financing postsecondary
learning are straining to keep up.
Tuition costs nationally have risen at twice the Consumer Price
Index for much of the past decade.As a
percentage of the average family’s monthly paycheck, tuition now costs over 50
cents on the dollar, before taxes, for private schools, and close to 20 cents
for public schools. According to The College Board, tuition and fees at 4-year
public institutions and 4-year private institutions increased 54% and 37% in
constant, inflation-adjusted dollars since 1995-96.
To meet growing demands, the federally-insured student loan
market has more than doubled in the past 10 years, and now provides 30 percent
of all payments for college tuition.Some economists have argued that increased government funding and loans
have even put upward pressure on college costs, ultimately making college less attainable.
In short, federal student financial aid can no longer be
relied upon to keep pace with the rising cost of higher education in America.The landscape has changed substantially since
Congress passed the Higher Education Act of 1965, and policies must adapt to
meet this changing landscape.
Nowhere is this more noticeable than with the facebook of
American higher education:
It’s a much larger population, and it’s still growing: the
undergraduate population has increased by more than 75 percent, and the
Department of Education predicts that the college age population will increase
further, by approximately 12 percent by 2014.
“Traditional” full-time students, enrolling immediately
after high school, have become the exception, not the rule. Nearly 40 percent of today’s postsecondary
students are self-supporting adults, age 24 and older.Almost half attend school part time, more
than a third work full time, and 27 percent have children themselves, according
to the NationalCenter for Education Statistics.
Research from the Education Trust helps us fill in other
critical details about this changing population.Only half of “college qualified” students
from low-income families enter 4-year colleges, compared with over 80 percent
of students from high-income families with the same qualifications.When President Lyndon Johnson made this case
to Congress in 1965, this number for low-income students was only one in
three.
Nonetheless, as Ross Wiener from Ed Trust put it in his
testimony to the House Education Committee earlier this year, “The sad reality
is that America’s
highest-achieving low-income high school graduates go directly on to college at
the same rate as our lowest achieving, high-income high school graduates.”
There has also been much written on the changing face of the
higher education population as it relates to race.African-American students are roughly half as
likely to earn a bachelor’s degree by age 29 as white students, while Latino
students are only a third as likely.These gaps have gotten worse over the past 30 years, which we’ll discuss
more fully later this morning.
To succeed in this new environment, policies will also need
to adapt.I’d like to mention three
critical areas:
1.Remedial Costs
Colleges are currently required to pay billions of dollars
each year to remediate students whose public education failed to equip them
with the required skills -- shifting these costs from secondary to
postsecondary education without modifying funding streams.Only 17 percent of high school seniors are considered
proficient in math, and only 36 percent in reading, according to the federal
Education Department.
2.Outdated or
Flawed Delivery Systems
State funding for higher education has fallen – by 14
percent when adjusted for inflation between 1999 and 2004, according to The
College Board.As college costs rise
faster than government student aid can keep up, the increased burden is
regularly being passed on to students.Student loan providers would likely do the same thing should their
profit margins be cut in half, as some currently-proposed “solutions” would
effectively do.
Unless current trends are reversed, a number of current Congressional proposals would produce
the additional, expensive effect of raising default rates on student loans,
leaving taxpayers holding the bag.
Companies that profit from guaranteed student loans have
become a fashionable target.But data
show that default rates are significantly higher for loans made under the
government’s Direct Loan program than by federally guaranteed loans by private
lenders.Student loan debt is unique in
that it cannot be erased through personal bankruptcy, and it is not surprising
that private companies have proven more adept at using technology and
innovation to keep track of customers.
3. Runaway Spending
Any effective solution must include a strategy for managing
rising college costs.To keep tuition
increases as small as possible, while also maintaining quality, institutions
must set and achieve clear and well-understood goals, and maintain the
budgeting discipline to adhere to those goals.
One remedy is for higher education institutions that
increase their cost to students at twice the rate of inflation to offer an
explanation and a plan to hold down future costs.There are strong benefits to such
transparency in operations, even though colleges and universities have put up
staunch resistance when lawmakers have sought to require it.
Most Americans would agree that a higher education is worth
the investment, and is increasingly necessary in the 21st century
economy.But in order to best support
the rising costs, policymakers must ensure that each new appropriation
represents the best strategy and mechanism for delivering on that investment.