The Impoverishment of the American College Student - James V. Koch

The Impoverishment of the American College Student

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
266 Seiten
2019
Brookings Institution (Verlag)
978-0-8157-3261-7 (ISBN)
24,90 inkl. MwSt
Higher education funding and tuition and fee inflation are complicated matters that very few people understand well. Degrees of Debt clarifies the central issues and provides plentiful data to support its key points. It is a must-read for anyone who believes that maintaining access to and the affordability of public colleges are vitally important to society's future.
Is the end in sight for college tuition hikes?

Tuition and fees at public colleges and universities consistently have risen twice or even three times as fast as comparable increases in the Consumer Price Index in recent years. Since 2000 these costs have even grown 60 percent faster than health care costs. The results have been rapidly rising student debt (now $1.4 trillion nationally), rising delinquencies in debt repayment, and a dysfunctional stratification of public college student bodies on the basis of family incomes. This is a broken, unsustainable model for the majority of public colleges.

Why has this occurred? The multiple causes include declining state support, the avaricious behavior of individual institutions, their reluctance to adopt productivity-increasing innovations, their cost-increasing competition for higher U.S. News ratings, and misdirected federal student financial aid policies.

The key actors are the 50,000 members of the governing boards of public colleges, who too often forget that their primary responsibility is to citizens, taxpayers, and the 15 million students. Instead, board members are co-opted by clever administrators into approving tuition and fee increases well beyond what is needed to make up for declining state funding. Concerted, informed public pressure on governors, legislators, and board members is necessary to move institutions in more positive directions.

Higher education funding and tuition and fee inflation are complicated matters that very few people understand well. Degrees of Debt clarifies the central issues and provides plentiful data to support its key points. It is a must-read for anyone who believes that maintaining access to and the affordability of public colleges are vitally important to our society's future.

James V. Koch is Board of Visitors Professor of Economics at Old Dominion University and served fifteen years as a college president (Old Dominion and the University of Montana). He has been a consultant for more than 100 colleges and businesses and has written widely about economics and higher education.

Preface
Acknowledgments
1. The Spiraling Costs of Higher Education
2. The Student Fallback Options: Loans and Debt
3. A Rising Flood of Student Indebtedness
4. Cross-Subsidies and Affordability in Public Higher Education
5. A Closer Look at Redistributive Student Pricing
6. College Endowments and Tuition: Should There Be a Tighter Connection?
7. Declining State Support for Education and What It Means for America
8. William Bennett's Gauntlet: Is the Federal Government Part of the Problem?
9. Baumol, Bowen, and the Overworked String Quartet Simile
10. Bowen's Rule: Faculty Activity, Administrative Bloat, Amenities, and Mission and Curriculum Creep
11. Parsing the Evidence and Evaluating Solutions to the College Cost Crisis
Notes
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 223 mm
Gewicht 485 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Erwachsenenbildung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management
ISBN-10 0-8157-3261-9 / 0815732619
ISBN-13 978-0-8157-3261-7 / 9780815732617
Zustand Neuware
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