Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
17.11.16
LA higher education heads misintepret election results
Louisiana higher education leaders they may be, but
they drew the wrong lessons from election night results.
Disappointingly, Amendment 2 went down to defeat
at the hands of voters last week. This would have transferred tuition authority
from a supermajority of the Legislature to university management boards. This
makes tuition changes fairly inflexible in a marketplace demanding more and more
adroitness in pricing decisions.
While difficult to ascribe motivations for voting
behavior on this issue, perhaps the majority felt the Legislature would look
less kindly on hiking tuition than the appointees it vets for the boards.
Currently, the GRAD
Act has delegated in a limited fashion the Legislature’s authority for this
by allowing schools to increase tuition up to 10 percent annually until
reaching the southern regional average, under contracts that will expire soon.
Successful negotiations for new six-year contracts could continue this power
exercised by the three boards.
So, the election results support the status quo on
this issue – but not in the eyes of Commissioner of Higher Education JosephRallo. Instead, he made the inferential leap that the amendment rejection served
notice that the people wanted to keep tuition increases down, because they want
the state to spend more taxpayer resources on higher education.
Much has been made over the past six years of the
decline in taxpayer bucks going to Louisiana higher education coupled with
increases in tuition, both among the highest among the states in that period.
Much less commonly known is that Louisiana
acted as an extreme outlier in that regard. In most states during these
years, both taxpayer spending and tuition increased a small amount. Keep in
mind as well that at the beginning
of this period Louisiana spent on a per
capita basis in the top ten of states on higher education and had
the lowest average tuition and fees for senior institutions, so this
rebalancing was more than in order.
These data also put into perspective comments
made by Louisiana State University President F. King Alexander, who noted that
in the 2001-11 period the substitution effect present recently in Louisiana
played a much more prominent role in national trends. If that happened, outside
of Louisiana that certainly has stopped since then.
King made this observation in the context of
arguing that a “federalization” of education had occurred, pointing to the fact
of a massive increase in federal government assistance to state institutions of
higher education over the past half century. Indeed, in 1976 the federal
government spent about $5.4
billion in direct grants and about $2.6
billion more in indirect aid (grants and subsidized lending to students).
This year, direct
aid will be about $25 billion and indirect aid around $49 billion. This 825
percent increase far outstrips the inflation rate over the period of 325 percent, while tuition at
four-year schools nationally increased 612
percent over this span and state support increased 221
percent (although this figure does not include two 2016 state budgets,
Illinois and Pennsylvania, that remain unresolved, so this understates the
actual increase by dozens of percentage points).
Yet instead of arguing that federal support
created an inflationary bubble advancing much faster than the cost of living,
King incredibly uses these data to argue that states fell behind. This entirely
misunderstands the issue: it’s not a matter of relative state and federal
spending, but of whether absolutely too much has occurred that artificially
pumps up pricing.
As for Louisiana. the state still has below-average
tuition for baccalaureate and above institutions, ranked 29th among
the states – although note that the presence of the Taylor Opportunity Program
for Students means the actual mean would be about 20 percent lower. State
taxpayer support per full-time equivalent enrollee (2015 data) ranks 33rd,
while per
capita income ranks 34th. In other words, taking TOPS into
account, Louisiana’s pricing and support of education has gravitated to a
proper balance, contrary to Rallo’s assertion, and taxpayer effort has no need
to go higher, when understanding the flaw in Alexander’s argument.
This means if state higher education wishes to
increase the breadth and depth of its product, it must look within to garner
efficiency gains. It must address questions such as whether too few students chase
too many campuses; if existing programs genuinely contribute to educations
based upon the liberal arts or science/technology/engineering/mathematics or if
some curricula chase trendy, vainglorious projects based more on ideology than intellectual
inquiry; should faculty expectations for teaching and researching need
rebalancing; whether administrative superstructures has grown too much, etc.
Meanwhile, a parallel national debate must occur over how the federal
government should fund higher education to make sure its actions do not distort,
to taxpayers’ detriment, the marketplace.
Those kinds of questions represent the proper perspective
that the election results should produce, not that elicited from Rallo and
Alexander.
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