These are all numbers from a group that greatly advocates that it's all a funding issue:
State funding for universities dropped by about 10% nationally from 2008 to 2017 (pre-great recession to, well, 2017). From 2013 to 2017, state funding has increased nationally. INCREASED. If this is a matter of state funding then the tuition hikes would be, well, roughly 10% for 2008 (it's not, it's 35%). If this were a matter of state funding then tuition would not have increased from 2013 to 2017 -- LOL.
In Michigan, the cuts were 16% (Ohio was 15%, Georgia was also 15%). In Michigan, tuition rose 26%. In Georgia, tuition rose 75%. In Ohio, despite "deep slashing" tuition only rose 4.8% Perhaps it's because:
Meanwhile, it's crystal clear what's driving the accumulation of debt -- for-profit schools. The University of Phoenix has an astounding $35.5B in debt owed it. The next highest schools in the country are Walden ($9.8B) and Nova Southeastern ($8.7B). No non-profit cracks the top 10 ($1.3B threshold).
These schools are the worst kind of gambles. It's not the traditional universities that are producing crushing debt -- crushing in relation to the value of the degree. It's the for-profits. And why are people going to these types of schools. Welp, Hannibal nailed. He is absolutely right when he says:
State funding for universities dropped by about 10% nationally from 2008 to 2017 (pre-great recession to, well, 2017). From 2013 to 2017, state funding has increased nationally. INCREASED. If this is a matter of state funding then the tuition hikes would be, well, roughly 10% for 2008 (it's not, it's 35%). If this were a matter of state funding then tuition would not have increased from 2013 to 2017 -- LOL.
In Michigan, the cuts were 16% (Ohio was 15%, Georgia was also 15%). In Michigan, tuition rose 26%. In Georgia, tuition rose 75%. In Ohio, despite "deep slashing" tuition only rose 4.8% Perhaps it's because:
As tuition soared after the recession, federal financial aid increased. Total Pell Grant aid, the nation's primary source of student grant aid, rose by 68 percent between the 2008 and 2016 school years. This substantial boost has enabled the program not only to reach more students ? 2 million more students received Pell support last year than in 2008 ? but also to provide the average recipient with more support.[45] The average grant rose by 23 percent, to $3,724 from $3,034.[46]
These schools are the worst kind of gambles. It's not the traditional universities that are producing crushing debt -- crushing in relation to the value of the degree. It's the for-profits. And why are people going to these types of schools. Welp, Hannibal nailed. He is absolutely right when he says:
The basic fundamental reason that college costs so much is "because they can". They can because kids will go to college at any cost, and they will get the money to do it. The kids will do it at any price for both psychological reasons and practical ones. As a result, there is no corrective mechanism for inefficiency and misuse of funds.
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