Sagging state funding jacks up college tuition
Massive cuts in state funding aren't helping the rising costs of college tuition.(Photo: Getty Images)Story HighlightsHigher-education funding down 30% or more in 15 states since 2007Cuts lead to higher tuition, staff layoffsStates adjusting to more strategic spendingThe start of a new school year is punctuated by what's become a new financial norm for public universities: massive cuts in state funding that lead to rising tuition, cuts in enrollment, sporadic class schedules and staff layoffs.Despite some recent tuition freezes for the 2013-14 school year, public universities continue to suffer from significant spending cuts by their own states. The state funding cuts are the primary driver of tuition inflation in recent years, education experts say.Between 2007 and 2012, 15 states have experienced declines in higher-education funding per full-time student of nearly 30% or more, according to a report on higher-education financing put out by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association earlier this year. Since the recession, 48 states have cut state appropriations while just two have increased funding.How schools respond to the cuts usually leads them to consider three options, says Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of the Edvisors.com network of college financial planning sites."They increase tuition, they shift enrollment from in-state students to out-of-state and international students, who pay higher out-of-state tuition, and they cut enrollments so that each student gets the same size slice of the pie of funding," he says.This also often leads to staff cuts and classes being offered less frequently, making it harder for students to get into required courses and graduate on time, he says.Meanwhile, tuition has soared, and students and their families are funding more of the cost of their educations. Trying to reverse these problems, President Obama described his plans to help lower the cost of college on a three-campus, two-day bus tour last month.The…
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