This topic is just for fun, but interested in how everyone thinks it will all play out. Is there a higher ed bubble? What caused it? What will the tipping point be that causes it to pop? What effect will that have on the rest of the economy?
This is also a bit of an excuse to share this bread article that I found interesting:
https://nyti.ms/2qstonF
"The association tracks the average tuition “discount rate” at private colleges and universities — that is, the difference between the “sticker price” that colleges advertise and the actual price they charge students, after subtracting scholarships granted by the colleges themselves. If, for example, the sticker price is $50,000, but the average student pays $30,000, the discount rate is the difference ($20,000) divided by the sticker price ($50,000), or 40 percent.
In the 2005-06 academic year, the average freshman discount rate at private colleges was 38 percent. It has increased every year since, rising to a high of 49.1 percent last fall...
...The steadily growing tuition discount rate suggests that the price discrimination payoff is in decline. If you increase your tuition by $100, but have to increase your average discount by $100, you’re no better off. Price discrimination could have been a time-limited strategy that allowed small private colleges to cut costs, develop new programs and use information technology to reach new markets. But for a growing number, it was a way to put off a day of reckoning that now seems to have arrived."
Seems like the small expensive liberal arts college isn't long for this world. The "discount rate" for medical schools is basically zero though. Without some federal student loan reform, I sense we are nowhere near the tuition ceiling for what a doe-eyed pre-med is willing to borrow.
Answer however you like! Tinfoil hat approved.
This is also a bit of an excuse to share this bread article that I found interesting:
https://nyti.ms/2qstonF
"The association tracks the average tuition “discount rate” at private colleges and universities — that is, the difference between the “sticker price” that colleges advertise and the actual price they charge students, after subtracting scholarships granted by the colleges themselves. If, for example, the sticker price is $50,000, but the average student pays $30,000, the discount rate is the difference ($20,000) divided by the sticker price ($50,000), or 40 percent.
In the 2005-06 academic year, the average freshman discount rate at private colleges was 38 percent. It has increased every year since, rising to a high of 49.1 percent last fall...
...The steadily growing tuition discount rate suggests that the price discrimination payoff is in decline. If you increase your tuition by $100, but have to increase your average discount by $100, you’re no better off. Price discrimination could have been a time-limited strategy that allowed small private colleges to cut costs, develop new programs and use information technology to reach new markets. But for a growing number, it was a way to put off a day of reckoning that now seems to have arrived."
Seems like the small expensive liberal arts college isn't long for this world. The "discount rate" for medical schools is basically zero though. Without some federal student loan reform, I sense we are nowhere near the tuition ceiling for what a doe-eyed pre-med is willing to borrow.
Answer however you like! Tinfoil hat approved.
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