So it sounds as if, there is no incentive on the part of colleges, to rein in costs. Reason being, they can raise tuition and fees at will, and receive little pushback, because students will simply end up borrowing more to cover the increases.
Gov. Daniels taking a hatchet to Purdue’s administration costs is a top-down bureaucratic solution. It probably involved a huge fight with leftist admin and unions, and took years to implement. also, its only one school, and will probably be reversed by some suck-up leftist politician trying to win favor with the massive, political industrial-education complex.
How about simply eliminating all Federal aid to higher-education, and stop subsidizing student loans instead?
Less money means this nonsense automatically stops, everywhere.
My daughter will graduate with MSW (masters social work) with $45,000 student loan debt after 6 years of college. We’ve worked hard at keep it at the that.
Get the government out of the loan business. Let banks, investors, and financial institutions give loans. They’ll determine which majors are worth giving a loan for and how much the cost of that degree should be. So, maybe “electrical engineering” is worth $100k in loans at 5% interest while “gender studies” is worth $20k (the max a student can borrow for it) and comes with a 15% interest rate.
Universities will adjust if they can’t fill the seats/dorms with students paying what the government decided they should be able to pay for any major they want to pursue.
Get the Federal government out of the student loan game. Make the SCHOOLS issue the loans. Make them stand behind their (worthless) degrees. You’ll see the number of grads with Philosophy degrees and $100k in student loan debt decrease greatly.
I think their support for Mitch will quickly evaporate once they get out in the REAL WORLD and have to pay the tolls on I-90...due to Mitch selling off the road to the Spanish.
To win financial aid, students should do freshmen year at community college with an extra incentive to go 2 years and get the associates degree.
Pudlo’s Law of Economics: in any economic system, be it transportation, health care, education, etc... costs will rise to absorb any monies poured into it. and in any economic system, when costs rise disproportionally to other systems, there is usually an influx of government dollars driving up those costs.
Cutting colleges costs and expenses is easy.
Immediately cease and desist all taxpayer funded college loans. Immediately cease and desist all taxpayer funded grants and subsidies to colleges and universities. Immediately cease and desist all taxpayer funds towards salaries and expenses for our colleges and universities.
Shut down public universities. Let the private schools prevail.
Not only will academic standards skyrocket, but costs will plummet.
Easy.
Very simple: Stop the government from trying to make it “affordable.” Watch prices plummet.
Stop guaranteeing student loans. And allow them to be bsnkrupted, possibly with the exception of using the degree itself as collateral. Them backs wouldn’t fund stupid degrees.
When I got out of college the first time in the 70s I owed right about 1 years salary for my new job in school bills. I paid it back in just over 8 years. For quite a while that was on average the going rate.
The $40k number in the article is still in this range if you study something aside from the social sciences (?science?), psychology or some kind art.
Colleges are there to enrich and subsidize liberals. Then comes indoctrination followed by education.
bmp
What has changed is the amount of state funding to public universities, and the resulting tuition increases to make up that shortfall in revenue.
You who went to college in the 1970s and walked away with very little to no student debt were the recipients of massive government subsidies for your tuition. Don't blame guaranteed student loans, or greedy universities, or undisciplined spending. You can either blame state legislatures or praise them for shifting more of the burden of an education away from the taxpayer and onto the student.

The gubmint getting involved in managing college loans coupled with the college's depending on the increased money it affords them is the problem.
Textbooks.
Students should be able to access all of their text books through e-books for a nominal fee. That would save hundreds each quarter.
Dramatic cost reductions can be achieved by terminating “fake disciplines” like gender and race studies, social justice programs and the like. Also, dismantle the political propaganda arms of university administration. You would be surprised at how cost to students will decline.
I’m hoping Uncle Sam comes through for me again. My brother and I both had full 4-year ROTC scholarships to excellent universities. Saved my parents $200K. My brother-in-law went to The Naval Academy. That’s about $120K he saved my inlaws (graduated early 90s). The Navy also paid for my brother-in-laws PHD from M.I.T. Not too shabby. He only had to give them 14 years. I stayed in 24, my brother 5 years. My oldest son (I have 3 boys) is 14 and seems very interested in going to a service academy. Fingers crossed. I’m staring down the barrel of 3 college tuition bills at once...