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).
In other words, for a student population that has increased 5.5 percent since right before the hurricane disasters of 2005, spending per student has gone up overall 21.9 percent, and the taxpayers’ portion has increased 7.4 percent. Even in FY2008 at the peak of per-student spending as the Katrina fiscal bonus kicked in, total spending today still is 4.7 percent higher while per-student spending decreased a marginal 3.7 percent. Preliminary 2012 numbers of 222,681 students with spending of $2.912 billion, 40.5 percent self-generated, or $13,077 total per-student of which taxpayers picked up $7,781, don’t appear materially different.
To restate, to educate a few thousand more students than eight years
ago there currently is spent almost $700 million more annually. On a
per-student basis Louisiana pays about the same as it did then for hardly any
more students educated now. But per-student spending actually has increased by
almost a fifth because of increases in tuition and fees. The narrative that
there have been dramatic cuts to higher education in Louisiana is a myth – to date.
Nonetheless, the changing revenue mix has prompted some efficiency introduced
into higher education offerings. But they
have been marginal – program reductions and consolidations, slowdowns in
hiring, changing delivery to encourage degree completion, and minor merging of
delivery systems and back-office functions. They have not been where real
savings can occur.
Real savings occur when duplicative systems get consolidated, with
school mergers that make sense, with shedding baccalaureate-and-above
institutions in favor of community colleges, and inefficient fiscal practices
forced onto systems by law get dismantled. Besides some shuffling within systems
and minor,
largely unhelpful consolidations of community colleges, almost none of this
has been pursued.
Tuition has increased, but without
other changes to make the use of its fruits more rational, including essentially
free education over a certain minimal amount. Systems mergers have
gone nowhere, and when
a rational merger was scuttled, the next effort wasted
energy on a failed nonsensical one. If major dollars are to be saved, many
things previously rejected will have to be revisited and implemented.
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