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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Pell Grants cut, tuition fees rise
US: Higher education costs increase for the most needy
By Charles Bogel
15 November 2006
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The College Board, a not-for-profit organization that administers
entrance and other standardized tests in the US and whose membership
includes more than 5,000 institutions of higher learning, has
released several reports on higher education in the United States.
All of these studies lead to the inescapable conclusion that since
the year 2000, middle- and lower-income students have been paying
more for public higher education at a time when they are less
able to afford doing so.
As a result, we are witnessing an ever widening gap in access
to higher education between the majority of Americans and those
at the top. This gap in educational opportunity is driven by a
historically unprecedented growth of income inequality.
Two College Board reports, Trends in College Pricing
2006 and Trends in Student Aid 2006, reveal
that although the rise in average tuition and fees for four-year
public colleges has decreased over the past three years, college
costs are still up 35 percent over the past five years, after
adjusting for inflation. For the 2006-2007 academic year, tuition
and fees at four-year public institutions increased by 6.3 percent
($344), or 2.4 percent after adjusting for inflation. At two-year
public colleges, the increase in average tuition and fees for
the same time period was 4.1 percent ($90), slightly less than
one-half of one percentage point higher than the rate of inflation,
and two percentage points below the increase for four-year institutions.
Compounding the financial burden of increased tuition and fees
is the continuing decrease in student aid. While $134.8 billion
in student aid was disbursed from state governments, institutions
of higher learning and private sources, the inflation-adjusted
dollars provided by all of the federal aid programs was actually
lower in 2005-2006 than it had been earlier in the decade. Lower-income
students were particularly disadvantaged. The average Pell Grant
award, the largest andbecause the money does not need to
be repaidmost beneficial source of aid for middle- and low-income
students, was $120 less in the 2005-2006 academic year than in
the previous year.
It is not only the Pell Grant dollar amount that has changed,
however. The number of eligible recipients has also decreased,
and not by accident. As the WSWS has reported, in 2004 the Bush
administration and the US Congress changed the formula for determining
how much family income is discretionary and thereby available
to help pay for college tuition and fees. Prior to the 2004 change,
the formula allowed families to deduct part of what they paid
in state and local taxes. The 2004 rule change significantly cut
the allowable amount to be deducted. (See US
Congress uses Alice in Wonderland logic to sell cuts in college
grants) A New York Times editorial published
November 1 reported that the 2004 rule change has decreased the
Pell Grant coverage of the average costs at a four-year school
from 42 percent five years ago to about a third today.
Many middle- and lower-income students are also being economically
disadvantaged by the need to take remedial courses. According
to the College Board supplement to Education Pays: The Benefits
of Higher Education for Individuals and Society, released
on October 24, over one-third of first- and second-year
college students have taken remedial courses since high school
graduation. Because these courses do not cover college material
but rather serve the student as refreshers for high school material,
remedial courses do not generally count as college credit. As
one might expect, students who take these courses often take longer
to graduate (e.g., in 1999-2000, students who began their college
careers in four-year institutions took an average of 6.2 years
to complete their degrees), thereby forgoing the money they might
have earned had they graduated. Furthermore, because many of these
students must take out more loans the longer they stay in college,
they will owe more money once they do graduate.
Middle- and lower-income students often come from districts
where the loss of tax revenues has led to schools with crumbling
infrastructures, old or nonexistent instructional materials, and
burned-out or ill-prepared instructors. For these students, preparing
for college-level work is not nearly as easy as it is for their
counterparts in wealthier districts where facilities, materials
and instructors are often first-rate. Consequently, they are the
ones who frequently must take remedial courses and who ultimately
pay more, relative to personal income, for their education than
their wealthier peers.
It is not just recent high school graduates who are paying
more for their education while receiving less financial aid. An
increasing number of former autoworkers are returning to school
after they have seen their jobs eliminated and/or been forced
to accept a buyout. Others are returning to school because their
present jobs simply do not offer adequate wages and benefits.
Often middle-age or approaching retirement, these non-traditional
students are also confronting economic problems. Due to the length
of time since they attended high school, many must take remedial
coursework, with the same additional costs experienced by recent
high school graduates, but at a time in life when these costs
will be harder to pay. And, while their former employers may be
paying for a significant portion of their education, they frequently
have children who are experiencing their own economic problems
and who must therefore be helped.
The College Board notes another disadvantage for lower-income
families: tax benefits favor middle- and upper-income families
over lower-income families. In fact, only 22 percent of the tuition
tax deduction goes to taxpayers with incomes below $50,000.
The College Boards proposed solutions to decreasing this
gap in access to higher education, however, fail to get at the
root of the problem. According to Gaston Caperton, president of
the College Board, both affordability and rigorous academic
preparation are critical to improving access to college.
But the same press release notes that public colleges and universities
are paying more for health benefits and utilities, in addition
to paying higher salaries to their faculty, at a time when state
and local funding for higher education is being reduced.
Middle- and lower-incomes students and their families are caught
in the same trap. While they are paying more for tuition and health
care, in addition to other expenditures (the College Board press
release adds that Tuition and fees represent only a fraction
of the cost of attending college) their incomes have actually
been stagnating or even falling.
The recently published study The Evolution of Top Incomes,
found that while the wealthiest 1 percent of American households
made 29.3 percent of the nations pretax incomes in 2004,
the median family income grew only 1.6 percent from 2001 to 2004,
when adjusted for inflation. As reported in the Detroit Free
Press November 5, the same study found a simple reason for
this staggering disparity: the rich own more assets than the rest
of us, especially in terms of returns from stock market investments
in conjunction with the Bush administrations 2003 tax cuts,
which lowered the rate at which capital gains and dividends may
be taxed. (See Income
gap between Americas families is growing, study finds)
Under these conditions, middle- and lower-income students will
continue finding higher education less affordable.
As for the College Boards second commendable goal of
more rigorous academic preparation, urban and rural areaswhere
the great majority of middle-and lower-income students live and
attend a college or universityhave been hard hit by job
losses and stagnant or lower real incomes. With the resulting
loss in tax revenues, in addition to state and local funding cuts,
public high school systems are cutting faculty and staff, decreasing
many of the programs that do indeed result in a more rigorous
academic environment, such as art, music and vital extracurricular
activities. Due to a lack of space and instructional resources,
these secondary schools are sending more of their students to
community colleges under dual enrollment programs
where the students often wind up in remedial programs, thus attenuating
an already weakening environment of rigorous academic preparation.
To attain the College Boards goals and ensure equal educational
opportunities for all, the source of the ever-widening gap between
the rich and the vast majority of the population must be addressedthe
capitalist profit system based on the private ownership of the
means of production. Neither the increases in the cost of tuition
and fees, healthcare, utilities and other essentials, nor the
stagnation and often decline in real wages are the result of workers
creating less wealth. Indeed, since 1972, the gross domestic product
of the US has increased by 50 percent in real dollars. Rather,
these conditions are the consequence of a profit system that allows
1 percent of the population to gain nearly 30 percent of the nations
pretax wealth and where CEOs are now making 431 times the wage
of the average American worker.
In its 2006 election statement, For
a socialist alternative in the 2006 US elections the
Socialist Equality Party has called for massive investment
to ensure high-quality public education and access to free higher
education. To achieve this, economic life must be reorganized
according to rational and humane, i.e., socialist foundations,
combined with a radical redistribution of wealth. Only in this
way can basic needs such as education, housing and be provided
to all.
See Also:
SEP public meeting: Political
lessons of the Detroit teachers strike
[19 September 2006]
Detroit teachers vote narrowly
to end strike
[14 September 2006]
Bush administration uses Gulf
Coast reconstruction to push for dismantling of public education
[21 January 2006]
US colleges and universities
increase tuition again
[27 October 2005]
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