One drumbeat of opinion that relentlessly will be propagated by some in
the upcoming debate is that Louisiana higher education has suffered horribly as
result of fiscal retrenchment in recent years, necessitating that existing levels
of funding be maintained, if not increasing them that require additional
revenues on way or the other. This view ignores the facts surrounding actual
higher education spending in Louisiana.
Six months after Gov. Kathleen Blanco took
office, in that fiscal year the state spent about $2.342
billion on higher education, serving (by the fall headcount) 214,144
students, of which 29 percent was self-generated (most of this being tuition
and fees), or a per-student cost of $10,937 ($7,765 to taxpayers). Four years
later, a half-year after Gov. Bobby Jindal
recited the oath of office for the first time, $2.878
billion was spent (25.9 percent self-generated) on 207,760
students, or a per-student cost of $13,853 ($10,265 to taxpayers). Then, last
completed fiscal year, $3.012
billion (37.5 percent self-generated) paid for 225,835
students, or a per-student cost of $13,337 ($8,336 to taxpayers).