Going Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much
The dramatic rise in university tuition costs is placing a greater financial burden on millions of college-bound Americans and their families. Yet only a fraction of the additional money colleges are collecting—twenty-one cents on the dollar—goes toward instruction. And, by many measures, colleges are doing a worse job of educating Americans. Why are we spending more—and getting less? In Going Broke by Degree, economist Richard Vedder examines the causes of the college tuition crisis. He warns that exorbitant tuition hikes are not sustainable, and explores ways to reverse this alarming trend.
Vedder’s research demonstrates that America’s universities have become less productive, less efficient, and more likely to use tuition money and state and federal grants to subsidize noninstructional activities such as as athletics. These factors combine to produce dramatic hikes in tuition, making it more difficult for Americans to afford college.
Vedder believes that competition from for-profit universities (the fastest growing sector in higher education), computer-based distance learning, and nonuniversity certification of skills can be a powerful force for needed change. He suggests that possible solutions to the tuition crisis include modifying tenure, increasing teaching loads, paring administrative staffs, increasing distance learning, and cutting costly noneducational programs. He also suggests even more dramatic changes, including transforming state grants to universities into student voucher programs, as well as other steps to increase privatization of state universities.
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Review by Richard B. Schwartz for Going Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much
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This is an interesting book, one that runs counter to, e.g., Ronald Ehrenberg’s book (Tuition Rising) on the growth in university costs. Where Ehrenberg is largely accepting of `the way things are’ in higher education and more prone to reforms at the margins, Vedder portrays himself as an `outsider’ and a skeptic, questioning fundamental assumptions about the funding of higher education and offering striking, even radical alternatives.
His position is that of a gadfly, challenging received wisdom and commonly-accepted methods of proceeding. He is, however, a university professor (at Ohio University), not a real, raging outsider, and he is, like Ehrenberg, an economist. As an economist, he is fond of charts, graphs, data and evidence and his book is particularly useful for the information that it offers. For example, even when he juxtaposes for-profit education with not-for-profit education in ways that might make those who participate in the latter uncomfortable, he offers useful and informative material on, e.g., the University of Phoenix.
His principal concern is economic. Much of U.S. higher education is, in effect, being funded by third parties (the government, lending agencies, endowments . . . ) and individuals are far less likely to be sensitive to price when someone else is paying (or helping to pay) the bill. This is exacerbated by the fact that universities spend all their available money (more or less) and are not constrained by the need to yield profits. In economic terms, they lack fiscal discipline, a situation further exacerbated by their governance mechanisms.
Hence he poses big questions. Should we abolish tenure? Should we privatize all public education? Should we suspend all government support for higher education? Should we have single indirect-cost rates for all research universities, rates that would be lower than the current average? Should we move to a system of vouchers in which the government money should all go directly to students? Should the vouchers be portable across state lines (and include private institutions)?
His conclusions tend to be more moderate, since they are tempered by political and cultural realities. The information which he adduces, however, when he pursues his questions, is very useful and informative.
I would recommend that readers of Ehrenberg also read Vedder (and vice-versa). The two complement one another in interesting ways and both offer interesting material for consideration.