Santa Fe New Mexican

Hefty ‘sticker price’ for college not what most students pay

Merit-, need-based aid significan­tly reduces university costs for many enrollees, according to new report

- By Ann Carrns

Families with college-bound students may well have shuddered when they heard that the official, full cost of a year at some four-year private schools will soon hit six figures.

But outrage over mushroomin­g college “sticker” prices clouds a reality that some families may not fully understand: Few students pay the full price. That’s because colleges give financial aid to income-eligible students and merit aid — in the form of scholarshi­ps or tuition discounts — to more affluent families that may be able to pay the full price but may balk at doing so.

On average, private nonprofit colleges cut tuition by more than half for first-time undergradu­ates, according to a recent report from the National Associatio­n of College and University Business Officers.

That means college sticker prices — the full “cost of attendance” that the federal government requires colleges to publish — are an increasing­ly unreliable indicator of what a family will pay, according to a report titled, in part, “Ignore the Sticker Price,” and published Friday by the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington think tank. That goes for both lowand middle-income families, as well as for higher-income families that don’t qualify for need-based aid.

“Our current system of setting and communicat­ing college prices simply does not work,” wrote the author of the report, Phillip Levine, an economics professor at Wellesley College and a nonresiden­t senior fellow at Brookings. He analyzed federal data to track changes in college pricing for students at different income levels.

Sticker prices are easier to track than net prices — what students end up paying after deducting grants and other financial aid that doesn’t have to be repaid — but misleading because the share of students paying them has declined over time, the report said. In the 2019-20 school year, about 16% of students at private, nonprofit four-year colleges paid the full sticker price, down from 29% in the 1995-96 school year. (At in-state public colleges, about a quarter paid the sticker price in 2019-20, down from about half in 1995-96.)

Why would colleges promote themselves as more expensive than they really are? Colleges increasing­ly compete for students, and they may use the sticker price as a marketing tool to “signal” that the school is high quality, Levine said. They then award merit aid to encourage admitted students to enroll.

Average sticker prices at both private and public colleges rose roughly 70% from the 1995-96 to 2019-20 school years. Over the same period, typical net prices for lower-income students (with family incomes below $50,000) rose 44% at public schools and 24% at private schools — substantia­l increases but far below the rise in sticker prices.

For more than a decade, the report found, the typical net price at private colleges has increased just for higher-income students. But that still doesn’t mean college is affordable for low- or moderate-income families. Students from families with incomes of less than $50,000 are still being asked to pay almost $25,000 to attend a typical private institutio­n, the report found.

The net price at public colleges has also become more of a stretch for lower-income families. At public colleges, the typical net price that low-income students pay, adjusted for inflation, rose to $18,000 in 201920, from $12,500 in 1995-96.

Some colleges are “resetting” tuition to more accurately reflect what students will pay, hoping to attract more applicants. Bridgewate­r College, a small liberal arts school in rural Virginia, announced last year that it was lowering its published tuition more than 60%, to $15,000 from $40,300, starting next fall. (Housing, meals, books, supplies, travel and personal expenses, which add substantia­lly to the cost, are extra.)

“I think it’s time for higher education to be more transparen­t,” said David Bushman, Bridgewate­r’s president, adding that the move was made in part to answer growing public skepticism about the value of a college degree. Virtually no students were paying the school’s full cost of attendance in recent years, according to Bridgewate­r’s statistica­l report. The school’s new pitch: “Private college experience. Public college price.”

 ?? THOMAS FUCHS THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The share of those paying the full advertised cost for attending colleges and universiti­es has declined over the last couple of decades, a new report from the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington, D.C., think tank, found. Yet many don’t understand how much they’ll really pay.
THOMAS FUCHS THE NEW YORK TIMES The share of those paying the full advertised cost for attending colleges and universiti­es has declined over the last couple of decades, a new report from the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington, D.C., think tank, found. Yet many don’t understand how much they’ll really pay.

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