The bill, which recently passed
out of its House committee without dissent on its way to another, would amend
the Constitution so that in years where tuition and fees at universities
exceeded the previous year’s total, that would prevent any reduction in state
support, except when the state forecasts an overall budget deficit when a
slight reduction may occur. It does not exactly specify that it is the previous
year’s state appropriation out of general and dedicated funds level that is to
be maintained, but that would be inferred. If passed by voters this fall, it
would take effect at the beginning of fiscal year 2016, presumably supplanting
the GRAD Acts formula that now determines state support.
Leger framed his argument in
terms of “fairness” in that supplanting self-generated for taxpayer-generated
revenues the state therefore in a sense, because it was reducing its own
commitment while asking students (assuming the increase in self-generated
revenue came from increases in fees and tuition as opposed to more students
showing up more often) for more was reneging on a commitment to provide better
education quality – as if the only variable in determining the quality of
higher education was financial resources.
This turns the GRAD Acts on their
heads. The original and its successor based some funding of schools on their demonstrated
quality, even if imprecisely measured, where performing the service better and more
efficiently brought greater financial rewards. By contrast, this amendment
locks in an amount based upon a total created by the dynamics of budgeting for
this upcoming FY 2015 invariant of performance and extends into perpetuity,
save very minor potential downward revisions from time to time. This reduces
incentives for schools part of an overbuilt
statewide system to serve efficiently.
In a larger sense this also
sustains unwise policy-making. With so
little taxpayer-generated revenue available not already dedicated in a
straitjacketed fiscal system, lawmakers should look to loosen constraints
where money going to low priority, if even necessary, expenditures (or being
warehoused in funds for that purpose where there never would be any good reason
given that purpose to spend these) rather than become available for diversion
to higher education or other areas of higher priority. Instead, this approach
makes matters worse, leaving state government less able than ever to allocate
money on the basis of priority.
All of this is lost on Leger with
his “fairness” cosmology, which in reality rests on a
false assumption born of myth – that somehow tuition at its present level,
even after hikes approaching 50 percent over the past few years, asks too much of
Louisiana students. In fact, as of the latest data available, average tuition
in the state is ranked 47th highest among the state and District of
Columbia – and this does not even include the fact that about a fifth of all
students get free tuition through the Taylor Opportunity Program for Students –
while its per capita income ranks 39th, meaning that in a
proportionate sense Louisiana students aren’t being asked to pay for enough of
what their total educations costs, which taxpayers subsidize. (Ironically, Leger
calls the notion of supplanting self-generated revenue for taxpayer-generated
revenue a “tax” upon students when actually it represents the reduction of a
subsidy by taxpayers to students.)
It’s not a totally wacky idea, as
the amendment would do, to smooth out funding apogees and perigees that exist
in higher education, especially accentuated in Louisiana because of the rigid fiscal
structure that disproportionately thrusts variances upon higher education. In
that sense, by making schools more reliant upon tuition as has occurred over
the past few years, in this state’s case that does actually reduce volatility.
And the ideal way to do this would be to follow the proposal
once made by the University of Oregon to become free of state money for
operating expenses and eventually even of capital outlay requests, using only
self-generated and endowment dollars to fund its delivery of higher education.
However, this bill reduces
volatility in a way that neither promotes efficient service delivery nor enables
better aligning of revenues with spending overall. In the final analysis, it’s
more of a play on the populism that, while eroding, still resonates throughout
Louisiana’s political culture: with this guaranteed funding floor, pressure is
reduced on schools to match an appropriate amount of tuition charged (which
would be aided by the Legislature getting rid of ridiculous constraints such as
its approving of tuition increases and capping tuition paid at the equivalent
of 12 hours per semester) to ability to pay, thereby becoming yet another state
subsidy designed to build political support for state officeholders.
The bill reverses reforms to make
Louisiana, which ranks 18th per
capita in spending on higher education, a wiser user of that money and endorses
poor budgeting practices overall. It should not become law.
ReplyDeleteWell, well.
"... an overbuilt statewide system ..."
Still exists after six plus years of Governor Jindal?????
Wonder why!!!!
ReplyDeleteYep, and I see today that Jindal's marvelous management and budget is working well again - higher ed is out of money for the SECOND month in a row.
And, they are having to go to that ""hypocrite", Treasurer John Kennedy, to lend them money for the SECOND month in a row, and he has the audacity to be concerned that it Jindal's minions might not be able to pay it back. Wow, what a bad Treasurer!
Now, you can plainly see why we have not, OFFICIALLY, had our sixth mid-year budget cuts in a row! Jindal is saying just borrow it from someone else.
Keep defending the use of the nonrecurring money, Professor Cockalorum, and now we can see where it is getting us.
Hope you get paid next month!