Austin American-Statesman

Students in crossfire of rising book costs

- Zachary Schermele

President Joe Biden’s crusade against so-called “junk fees” is on its way to college campuses, and some of the pushback is fierce.

Some university leaders say a planned change to an Obama-era regulation could raise prices on textbooks and other course materials for students nationwide. Publishers are in a panic, accusing the Biden administra­tion of upending a pricing model they’ve spent years perfecting to offer affordable digital materials to millions of students on the first day of class.

Backed by consumer advocates, Education Department officials see it differently. They argue the model currently favored by colleges and textbook companies is akin to automatic billing and leaves out vulnerable students. The Biden administra­tion says it’s just trying to give college students more say in the ever-mounting fees listed on their tuition bills.

Some students and professors are worried the effort will backfire. Others are happy to have more control over their college costs. It’s unclear exactly how the change, which could take effect next year, will affect students’ bank accounts. But the implicatio­ns will likely depend on how publishers react, as well as the type of college that students attend and their financial situations.

The disagreeme­nt has played out in recent months in a sometimes contentiou­s federal rulemaking process. It highlights a key part of Biden’s strategy to curb college costs — the president has told his advisers that making higher education more affordable must be an accessory to the billions of dollars in student loan forgivenes­s he’s approved. As with their debt cancellati­on efforts, federal officials are pushing the change through on their own, avoiding Congress altogether.

“The Biden-Harris Administra­tion will continue its efforts to make higher education more affordable and accessible, as well as to eliminate hidden, surprise, and junk fees and put cash back in the pockets of Americans,” the White House said in a March statement.

Yet unlike other components of Biden’s campaign to reduce the financial burden of higher education, the debate over how to fairly set costs for college course materials, including textbooks, has a long history filled with examples of schools abusing their pricing power.

As the administra­tion mulls over a final version of the rule, a messaging war has broken out between colleges, publishers and the federal government. It is leaving some students without a clear sense of whether prices will rise or fall in the coming years.

In the decade between 2006 and 2016, college textbook prices ballooned by 88%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Hoping to repress the trend, the Obama administra­tion approved a regulation allowing colleges and universiti­es to charge students for course materials as part of their tuition and fees. Some affordability advocates scoffed at the change, later arguing the Education Department “effectively eliminated competing textbook markets for many college students.” Supporters have said the rule ultimately helped bring costs down.

The regulation had a few caveats. Schools needed to work with publishers to offer materials at “below competitiv­e market rates,” a threshold critics say was not well defined. And colleges had to give students the choice to opt out of the program.

Over the next few years, the controvers­ial (but widely used) term “inclusive access” took hold as the pricing model became more widespread. Many colleges worked with textbook publishers to create digital textbooks that students could access on the first day of class. Schools then tacked the bills for those course materials onto students’ overall fees.

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