The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Poll: Americans split on college endowment tax

Private schools aim to repeal new levy on endowments.

- By Janet Lorin Bloomberg

Americans are divided over whether U.S. college endowments should have to pay a new federal tax, according to a national survey on higher education.

Fifty percent of respondent­s sided with the wealthy private schools, while 43 percent agreed t he tax should be levied and 7 percent were unsure, according to data published Monday by Boston public media pro- ducer WGBH News, which surveyed about 1,000 adults ages 18 to 65.

As the price of college has increased more than inflation over decades and student debt has surpassed $1.5 trillion, Americans have questioned the value of higher education. Yet more than two-thirds in the poll said they believe colleges and universiti­es have a positive impact on society.

“We decided it was criti- cally important to our audi- ence to take the country’s pulse on some fundamenta­l questions about higher edu- cation, including whether or not Americans still value a college degree,” said Ken Cooper, who oversaw the project for WGBH News.

The tax bill passed last December added a new levy on college endowments, which schools are actively working to repeal.

The 1.4 percent tax on net investment gains of private university endowments worth more than $500,000 per student affects about 30 schools. The biggest share of schools — about 20 percent — are in Massachuse­tts, including Harvard University, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and Amherst College.

Fifty-four percent of respondent­s ages 18 to 29 believe endowments should be taxed, whereas the majority of those over 30 think they should be taxfree. The survey also found that 46 percent of Republican­s and 49 percent of Independen­ts favor the tax, compared with 38 percent of Democrats.

The poll also found that a majority of respondent­s support a racially and ethnically diverse student body, yet overwhelmi­ngly oppose the use of race as a factor in college admissions.

The poll was conducted Aug. 21 to 25 by Abt Associates, which provides research and consulting services in areas including education, health, environmen­t and social policy. Clients range from U.S. federal government agencies to universiti­es, some of which would pay the tax.

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