Student Loans Jack Up The Cost Of College
If students and parents were paying for college -- if there wasn't this vast federal pot of money to pluck from -- colleges couldn't charge what they do. Even ginormous state universities would have far smaller student bodies. Virginia Postrel writes about the edu-bubble at Bloomberg -- "U.S. Universities Feast on Federal Student Aid":
This week, President Barack Obama held a summit with a dozen higher-education leaders "to discuss rising college costs and strategies to reduce these costs while improving quality." The administration plans to introduce some policy proposals in the run-up to the presidential campaign.Any serious policy reform has to start by considering a heretical idea: Federal subsidies intended to make college more affordable may have encouraged rapidly rising tuitions.
It's not as crazy as it might sound.
As veteran education-policy consultant Arthur M. Hauptman notes in a recent essay: "There is a strong correlation over time between student and parent loan availability and rapidly rising tuitions. Common sense suggests that growing availability of student loans at reasonable rates has made it easier for many institutions to raise their prices, just as the mortgage interest deduction contributes to higher housing prices."
It's a phenomenon familiar to economists. If you offer people a subsidy to pursue some activity requiring an input that's in more-or-less fixed supply, the price of that input goes up. Much of the value of the subsidy will go not to the intended recipients but to whoever owns the input. The classic example is farm subsidies, which increase the price of farmland.
...This doesn't mean that colleges capture all the aid in higher tuition charges, any more than capital-equipment companies get all the benefit of investment tax credits. But it does set up problems for two groups of students in particular. The first includes those who don't qualify for aid and who therefore have to pay the full, aid-inflated list price. The second encompasses those who load up on loans to fill the gaps not covered by grants or tax credits only to discover that the financial value they expected from their education doesn't materialize upon graduation.
That's the situation many young people find themselves in today, which is one reason for their anger. The other is a widespread feeling, which the recession has intensified, that higher education is unfairly insulated from the everyday competitive pressures most people have to cope with. Instead of having to find ways to operate more efficiently and deliver ever-more value without raising costs, the way private-sector managers do, college administrators seem able to pass higher and higher bills on to their customers and the public.







I've seen a study that showed that tuition went up by exactly the amount provided by "education" lotteries and other schemes.
If you ever believed you'd never need algebra, well, here it is: the concept that if you add the same thing everywhere in the equation, nothing changes but the size of the numbers.
Radwaste at December 10, 2011 8:48 AM
This cannot be true.
If this were true, or close to true, surely all the tenured economics professors would be writing articles about this, and lobbying to stop it.
That we hear so little outcry from the Universities about this bad outcome of a good policy, I can only conclude this cannot be true.
jerry at December 10, 2011 10:15 AM
It surely plays a role and that probably varies by type of college. I suspect it plays a big role in the small fly by night operations.
Larger ones, I doubt it is so big based on what I have seen and been told.
I saw an interview on TV with a president of a state 4year school. The thing that stuck with me was despite the large increase in tuition, the school was actually get less money per student because the state was reducing how much they gave. Some time ago (like the 70s?) the state had paid a little over 70% of the cost of a student, with the cuts that had been proposed the state was going to only cover around 30%.
In talking with a family friend who works at a small private university I found out that their costs of skyrocketed. Their property taxes of really gone up. They have a lot more people to comply with various laws and programs. The IT department has expanded from 5 people and a couple of work study students (including me) in the 90s now to 25 people (her estimate). When I asked her, she said that the president, etc. did not make significantly more now though she wouldn't be specific.
The Former Banker at December 10, 2011 9:08 PM
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