The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

All colleges should be in free proposals

- Michael Simkovic University of Southern California

Students can use federal financial aid to attend any college they want, whether public or private.

But the “free college” proposals floated by some 2020 presidenti­al candidates would increase federal funding only for community colleges or staterun universiti­es. Private nonprofit universiti­es would be excluded.

The question is: Why? From my vantage point as scholar of economics of higher education, I see a few factors at play.

One is cost. It would be easier to fulfill campaign promises to make higher education “free” by covering only public institutio­ns, which tend to charge lower tuition and to spend less educating students.

But cost and quality tend to go together, and this relationsh­ip holds true for higher education.

One way to measure quality is whether students complete their studies as planned. Fouryear completion rates at public institutio­ns trail those at private non-profits by as much as 20% for students of the same race and sex.

Colleges and universiti­es with more funding and higher tuition – typically private institutio­ns – not only graduate students faster, but their graduates go on to earn higher salaries. Several studies have come to similar conclusion­s: Educationa­l resources affect earnings.

Since students at public colleges graduate at lower rates and earn lower salaries, they tend to default on their student loans more often than those who went to private nonprofit colleges. By making federal money available to both public and private colleges, it could lead to fewer students defaulting.

Ideally, federal funds provided by “free college” initiative­s would boost quality at colleges. But covering tuition at only public institutio­ns won’t increase the quality of education at these schools unless it means the schools have more money to spend.

Poorer outcomes at public institutio­ns can be explained by lower spending. For example, during the 2015-2016 school year, four-year public institutio­ns spent about $12,000 less than four-year private nonprofits per student per year. Twoyear public colleges invest dramatical­ly less.

But the resource problems at colleges won’t get better if federal money merely pays the same tuition students are paying now. Many state government­s prohibit state colleges and universiti­es from increasing tuition, even as states have cut the amount of money they spend per student. Tuition caps would prevent public colleges from obtaining the additional resources they need to improve.

These price ceilings worsen problems such as high studentto-faculty ratios, low instructor pay and restricted course offerings. They also mean schools must turn away qualified students and allow facilities and equipment to fall into disrepair.

Without tuition caps, price would still be limited by market competitio­n.

Some free college proposals call for tying federal funding to state matching funds. One prominent example is the DebtFree College Act of 2018, which is cosponsore­d by several presidenti­al candidates – Sens. Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten E. Gillibrand. But demanding more state funding could backfire. Some state government­s might turn down federal funding for higher education if it requires states to spend more. The same thing happened when many states turned down Medicaid expansion.

Many students won’t attend college unless it is close to home, or is in a city where they hope to settle. Restrictin­g these students to public institutio­ns would limit their choice of academic programs and quality. For example, in some parts of the country, only private institutio­ns offer programs like business economics or electromec­hanical engineerin­g.

What could a federal subsidy look like that would empower students to choose the college they believe is best for them?

One option would be a voucher that would fund costs at a school of the student’s choice. For instance, a voucher could cover between 30% and 80% of tuition, fees, books and reasonable living expenses at any accredited public or nonprofit college or university.

Investing more public dollars in higher education boosts income and employment, which leads to more tax revenue, which benefits the public.

Some candidates have called for “means-testing” public funding for higher education. Means-tested funds are only made available to those who can prove they fall below a certain income threshold.

But public investment­s in education do not have to be limited to the poor to help the poor.

Including private nonprofit institutio­ns in affordabil­ity programs – or “free college” proposals – will benefit middle-income and poor students. Many private nonprofit institutio­ns seek to include and assist qualified students from less privileged background­s. Indeed, some of the most selective institutio­ns – and typically the best funded – have been among the most generous with respect to assisting students with financial need. With more government support, private institutio­ns could more easily educate more of these students.

Some might argue that making education funding available to private institutio­ns would divert funding from public universiti­es. But respecting student choice might make these programs more popular and build broader political support for increased funding for higher education.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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