What role have governing boards played in tuition and fee
escalation at four-year public colleges and universities? In the
United States, college costs, especially tuition and fees, have
increased much more rapidly than either the overall Consumer Price
Index or median household income. This cost inflation has
effectively closed the doors of higher education to many qualified
students and contributed to a staggering $1.5 trillion in student
debt. Additionally, the number of college enrollments in the United
States actually declined for eight straight years between 2011 and
2019, as college student bodies became increasingly stratified on
the basis of family incomes. Virtually every public college cost
increase, however, requires a positive vote from each university's
governing board-and the record shows that these votes are nearly
always unanimous. In Runaway College Costs, James V. Koch and
Richard J. Cebula argue that many trustees have forgotten that they
should act as fiduciaries who represent the best interests of
students, parents, and taxpayers. Instead, Koch and Cebula explain,
too often many trustees prize size and more prestigious rankings
over access and affordability. These misplaced priorities make them
vote in favor of ever more plush facilities, expensive
intercollegiate athletic programs, administrative bloat, and
outdated models of instruction and research. Koch and Cebula supply
groundbreaking empirical evidence on the impact of governing board
membership, size, and operations on tuition and fees. They show,
for example, that the existence of a powerful statewide governing
board exercises significant downward pressure on tuition and fees
and that state funding cuts cannot explain more than one-half of
the cost increases at the typical four-year public institution. The
authors propose an action agenda for governing boards, including
changing the incentives placed in front of campus presidents and
senior administrators. Finally, they conclude that, although public
university governing boards deserve blame for accelerating college
cost inflation, they also are ideally situated to improve the
situation. Runaway College Costs ends hopefully, suggesting that
governing boards and their member trustees actually have the
greatest potential to improve the situation. Providing the first
rigorous empirical evidence of the impact that various modes of
governance have had not only on tuition and fees but also on a
half-dozen measures of institutional performance, this book will be
of serious interest to governors, legislators, public university
board members and their staffs, those interested in supporting the
traditional goals of public higher education, and of course
students and their parents, as well as taxpayers.
General
Imprint: |
Johns Hopkins University Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
April 2020 |
Authors: |
James V. Koch
(Board of Visitors Professor of Economics Emeritus and President Emeritus)
• Richard J. Cebula
(Walker/Wells Fargo Endowed Chair in Finance)
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 21mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
256 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4214-3888-7 |
Categories: |
Books >
Social sciences >
Education >
Higher & further education >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4214-3888-7 |
Barcode: |
9781421438887 |
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