Posted on 05/06/2010 7:37:01 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Imagine for a moment you are an idealistic liberal functionary within Obamas Department of Education. Since Inauguration Day, youve been part of a massive expansion of subsidies for higher education, and youre proud of your work. The stimulus bill enlarged the higher-education tax credit and increased spending on Pell grants. The education bill that was tucked into the health-care reconciliation also expanded Pell aid and created a loan-forgiveness program for students who go into non-profit or government careers. Not bad.
Now imagine your dismay when you learn that all this new student aid is fueling a boom in enrollment, not at traditional universities and community colleges, but at for-profit schools such as the University of Phoenix and DeVry. For ideological reasons, you hate these schools. You view higher education as a right, a public good. Concepts such as advertising, charging market rates of interest, and making a profit corporatization, in a word are suspect in general and certainly have no place in education. And now these corporate parasites are reaping the fruits of all your hard work taking students who should be preparing for an exciting career at whatever ACORN is called these days and turning them into accountants and criminal-justice officers and possibly even Republicans.
With that in mind, its easier to understand the barely veiled sarcasm in Deputy Undersecretary of Education Robert Shiremans voice when you listen to the audio of a speech he gave to a group of state regulators last week. Shireman opened by recapping the Obama administrations accomplishments in the area of increasing subsidies for higher education. Then he noted that, because of falling state- and property-tax revenues, state and community colleges have reduced enrollment, raised tuition, and cut course offerings. In other words, the institutions that the Obama administration prefers have been unable to capitalize on the increased demand its spending has engendered.
On the other hand, Shireman noted (somewhat bitterly) that tuition-driven institutions didnt [have to make such cutbacks] because theyre tuition-driven institutions. He then called out the for-profit schools by name, reciting the percentages by which each had benefited from increased Pell grant spending in the last year: Corinthian Colleges? Are there some folks here from Corinthian Colleges? Corinthian Colleges: a 38 percent increase in the first three quarters of this year compared to the first three quarters of last year. He did the same for DeVry, ITT, Strayer, and the rest of the career colleges, and when he got to the end of the list, he said, So I wanted to begin just by thanking the for-profit industry for responding to the critical demands from people out there who need higher education. Id like everybody to give them a hand.
If Shireman was genuinely expressing his gratitude, it didnt come through in the comments that followed, in which he compared for-profit schools to the Wall Street firms that melted down the economy. He analogized the accrediting agencies that validate and monitor institutes of higher learning to the rating agencies that rubber-stamped Wall Streets complex derivative bets on the housing market, and suggested that state regulators and especially the Department of Education needed more power to regulate for-profit schools.
The markets got the message. DeVry closed down 4.8 percent, Apollo Group down 6.2 percent, Corinthian Colleges down 5.5, ITT down 6.6, etc. By the time the smoke cleared, shareholders of the top eight companies had lost nearly $1.6 billion.
Why the animosity toward the for-profit sector? With respect to higher ed, the roots are ideological. Shireman came to the Department of Education from serving as president of the Institute for College Access and Success, a non-profit that appears to want the private sectors role in higher education to be as small as is practicable. As president of TICAS, Shireman repeatedly testified before federal and state policymakers about the dangers of private student loans and for-profit-college student lending.
The very name for-profit bothers some people, says Jane S. Shaw, president of the John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy. Theres quite a bit of competition between the community colleges and the for-profits, and Barack Obama, because of his commitment to government ownership, tends to want to see a lot more students going to community colleges and a lot fewer going to for-profits, but theres no reason to favor one over the other. I think its a power grab, just like a lot of other power grabs weve seen over the last year.
As with Shiremans previous coup the federal takeover of student lending that involved the replacement of subsidized private lending with loans from the federal government a few caveats are in order. First, its true that for-profit colleges derive much of their revenue from the federal government via student aid. Anybody whos concerned about free markets, as I am, is bothered by the fact that these schools do depend so heavily on federal funds, says Shaw, but the money is going to the students, and theyre choosing those schools. The for-profits are successful because they are providing something these students want.
Second, the for-profits do charge a lot, and their private lending does tend to come with higher interest rates than that of federally subsidized loans. And the default rates on these loans do tend to be higher, though not significantly higher, than default rates for students at community colleges. That said, private-sector schools tend to do better in regard to graduation rates and earnings increases after graduation. (With all these comparisons, bear in mind that the cohorts are not identical for-profits and community colleges target similar, but not identical, demographic groups.)
The broader takeaway is that for-profit schools are the latest front in the Obama administrations campaign to control as much of the higher-ed industry as possible. As with other industries, regulating the risk out of the for-profit sector also means shrinking the available choices: New rules under discussion at the Department of Education would link a for-profit schools eligibility for federal funds to its graduates debt loads as a percentage of the average starting salaries in their chosen fields, an arbitrary measure that the schools say would restrict their course offerings to just a few programs. Other measures being considered would link eligibility to a 70 percent program-completion rate and a 70 percent in-field-placement rate after graduation standards the administration would never dream of requiring of traditional universities. (Imagine the Department of Education telling Big State U that 70 percent of its peace studies grads must be placed in field or it will lose federal funding for the program.)
The lesson, as always, is that government subsidies are never no-strings-attached affairs. Once an activity is fully subsidized, it is one Bob Shireman away from being fully controlled.
Stephen Spruiell is an NRO staff reporter.
Funny. Generally speaking the “for-profit” universities cater to working people who are earning their degree while holding a job. I don’t see how they can skew the benefits towards their fuzzy campus friends without running into anti-trust issues. Maybe someone knows how a Govt run lending program can discriminate. Oh yea, CRA, I forgot.
What utter bullsh#t...
The reason college cost are, and have been out of control since the 80’s is the lack of fiscal discipline. Outrageous and ever increasing Union/Prof. payrolls and benefits that no Democrat dares to address.
“For Profit” is just an easily demonized boogeyman for these people.
University of Phoenix is the biggest scam going, unless you work in a public sector job that only checks a box on a form saying you’ve gone to an “accredited” school and can thereby be promoted, there is no reason to go here. I can’t think of any private sector company that looks at these degrees as having value.
Why don’t they go after the likes of Harvard first.
Devries, ITT? I think plenty of people have gone here and ended up with jobs.
And how about those tax-free endowments?
I do not know much about the University of Phoenix but correspondence course is an old name for a different product. Online courses are now offered by many universities public and private. I am not sure the online University of Phoenix courses are much different than online courses offered by public universities. You might be surprised that many public universities charge more for online courses than traditional courses. I would not criticize the University of Phoenix just because it offers a lot of online courses.
How this guy can wax indignant over for-profit colleges while ignoring the astronomical cost, waste, and worthless degree programs all funded by tax dollars in the non-profit education world is almost unbelievable.
They have no intent of control rising tuitions. They just want complete control over what a school teaches & to whom.
State-run universities & colleges are also facing rising tuition.
When a student attends the University of Wisconsin, for example, the cost of having that student there is NOT carried by the tuition. The state of Wisconsin taxpayers also are putting a large amount of the cost into the pot.
It would behoove the schools to put out some of the figures that show how much the TAXPAYERS & the ALUMNI support keeping things going.
Students have thought for years that they “DESERVE” a FREE EDUCATION—for as many years as they decide to hide from actually having to work. Into their 30’s & 40’s if they want.
A couple of weeks ago, when students in San Francisco were protesting the rising costs of running the colleges—protestors were shouting that they had a RIGHT to a FREE EDUCATION-—into college & forever.
Free books- Free tuition—Free dormitories—Free everything.
BTW- The bullhorn shouter sure looked like she was Hispanic- wonder if she was even here legally? Knowing how San Fran views thing- I will bet that she was not legal.
Hillsdale College is looking better & better. They refuse entrance to anyone holding any kind of Federal grant. They refuse to take a single dime of Federal funds for anything.
They have alumni funds & other sources for deserving students.
For Profit is just an easily demonized boogeyman for these people.”
Muslim law decries making a profit-—even for the banks & other lenders.
No wonder they are mired in a 7th century social structure. Makes sense now that that NY bomber set the clock for 7 AM instead of 7 PM. He wsn’t used to clocks in a 7th century memtality.
he doesn’t want students to have other options than obamaed
I would love to be able to afford to send both my kids to Hillsdale one day (11 and 7). I hear Rush talk so highly about it, and now that I am reading “ A Patriot’s History”, it just makes more and more since.
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