Get Four
Free Issues

Subscribe to BW
Customer Service


Full Table of Contents
Cover Story
International Cover Story
Special Report
Up Front
Readers Report
Corrections & Clarifications
Voices of Innovation
Technology & You
Media Centric
The Barker Portfolio



Business Outlook
News: Analysis & Commentary
In Biz This Week
Washington Outlook
Asian Business
European Business
Global Outlook
People
Entrepreneurs
Marketing
Manufacturing
Government
Science & Technology
Information Technology
Sports Biz
Working Life
Personal Business
Plus
Inside Wall Street
Figures of the Week
Ideas -- Books
Ideas -- Viewpoint
Editorials


INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS
International -- Readers Report
International -- Int'l Figures of the Week




OCTOBER 31, 2005
EDITORIALS

Higher Ed's Higher Costs

Who says we're living in an era of low inflation? The 2005 survey by the College Board confirms what parents of any student have known for years: Already stratospheric education bills are headed even higher. Tuition costs at four-year private colleges rose about 5.9% last year, to $21,235. Add in room and board, and the bill exceeds $29,000 annually. Meanwhile, even though tuition inflation actually slowed at four-year public universities, it still logged a 7.1% jump.


The result of this cost increase spiral: The net cost of attendance (after adjusting for grants and certain tax benefits for students) at a four-year private college now exceeds $19,000 a year. That's a lot to swallow, even for middle-class families. But for poor students, the bite is much, much bigger: It takes a staggering 83% of a poor family's annual income to fund the annual costs at a private four-year college -- up from 60% a decade ago. To be sure, most of the poorest students receive financial aid. But increasingly, aid is shifting toward loans, so today's education sticker shock and the prospect of decades of college-debt repayment is causing many bright, poor students to seek cheaper two-year community college schooling -- or simply to eschew higher education altogether.

Another College Board study on the impact of education on incomes shows that neither option is a great one. It found four-year college grads make roughly $20,000 more than their high school-trained counterparts. And people who earn two-year degrees make only about $7,000 more a year than high school grads. The bottom line: A four-year degree is becoming America's most-reliable elevator of class and key to a middle-class standard of living.

That's why Washington must do more to make sure college is a real option, financially, for more people. A good place for Congress to start would be by finishing up reauthorization of the federal Higher Education Act, which would provide at least $420 billion in federal student loan guarantees over the next six years. Deliberations over competing House and Senate versions of the bill risk falling victim to lawmakers' post-Katrina hunt to find funds to shrink the budget deficit. While we're certainly not against reforming student aid programs -- the bill's move to save $6 billion to $10 billion by lowering certain ridiculously high lender incentives is long overdue, for instance -- it's wrongheaded to consider big cuts in student aid at a time when it's needed more than ever.

Indeed, in an era in which Congress routinely wastes taxpayers' money on million-dollar missiles that repeatedly miss their targets and $315 million bridges to nowhere, America can surely afford to invest more in upgrading the skills of its most important resource: its workers.



 BW MALL   SPONSORED LINKS
Buy a link now!

Get BusinessWeek directly on your desktop with our RSS feeds.XML

Add BusinessWeek news to your Web site with our headline feed.

Click to buy an e-print or reprint of a BusinessWeek or BusinessWeek Online story or video.

To subscribe online to BusinessWeek magazine, please click here.

Learn more, go to the BusinessWeekOnline home page

Back to Top



TODAY'S MOST POPULAR STORIES

  1. These Men Could Kill SarbOx
  2. America's Best Place to Raise Your Kids
  3. This Year's Holiday Hit Toy: Zhu Zhu Pets
  4. Wall Street Plays Hardball
  5. Abercrombie & Fitch Bargains for a Rebound

Get Free RSS Feed >>
  MARKET INFO
DJIA 10318.16 -14.28
S&P 500 1091.38 -3.52
Nasdaq 2146.04 -10.78

Portfolio Service Update

Stock Lookup

Enter name or ticker



Media Kit | Special Sections | MarketPlace | Knowledge Centers
McGraw-Hill Cos.