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College Prices Up Again As States Slash Budgets

Money

JUSTIN POPE   10/26/11 12:02 AM ET   AP

As President Obama prepared to announce new measures Wednesday to help ease the burden of student loan debt, new figures painted a demoralizing picture of college costs for students and parents: Average in-state tuition and fees at four-year public colleges rose an additional $631 this fall, or 8.3 percent, compared with a year ago.

Nationally, the cost of a full credit load has passed $8,000, an all-time high. Throw in room and board, and the average list price for a state school now runs more than $17,000 a year, according to the twin annual reports on college costs and student aid published Wednesday by the College Board.

The large increase in federal grants and tax credits for students, on top of stimulus dollars that prevented greater state cuts, helped keep the average tuition-and-fees that families actually pay much lower: about $2,490, or just $170 more than five years ago. But the days of states and families relying on budget relief from Washington appear numbered. And some argue that while Washington's largesse may have helped some students, it did little to hold down prices.

"The states cut budgets, the price goes up, and the (federal) money goes to that," said Patrick Callan, president of the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education. "For 25 years we've been putting more and more money into financial aid, and tuition keeps going up. We're on a national treadmill."

Nonetheless, President Obama planned to announce a series of steps to help with one of the consequences of rising college prices: student debt. This year total outstanding student loan debt has passed $1 trillion, now exceeding credit card debt. And concerns about student loan debt have been front and center with many of the Occupy Wall Street protesters.

Obama will use executive authority for two loan-relief measures. First, he will move up the start date – from 2014 to 2012 – of a plan Congress already passed that reduces the maximum repayment on federal student loans from 15 percent of discretionary incomes to 10 percent. The White House says about 1.6 million borrowers could be affected, and that remaining debt would be forgiven after 20 years, instead of 25.

The administration also will allow 5.8 million borrowers with outstanding loans from two federal programs – direct lending the Family Education Loan Program – to consolidate into a direct loan, potentially saving some borrowers hundreds of dollars per month.

Those changes may not help new borrowers much, but they could put cash in the pockets of millions still paying back their loans. They also could encourage more borrowers to take advantage of the income repayment options that are already in place, but not widely known. Finally, by consolidating into direct lending, more could qualify for that program's public service loan forgiveness, which can forgive debts after just 10 years of repayments for people working in nonprofit or public service jobs.

In the College Board's latest price report, some of the increase was driven by huge increases at public universities in California, which enrolls 10 percent of public four-year college students and whose 21 percent tuition increase this year was the largest of any state.

But even without California, prices would have increased 7 percent on average nationally – an exceptional burden at a time of high unemployment and stagnant family incomes.

Terry Hartle, senior vice president at the American Council on Education, which represents colleges in Washington, said the cause of the price increases for the 80 percent of college students who attend public institutions is clear. State appropriations to higher education declined 18 percent per student over the last three years, the College Board found, the sharpest fall on record.

"To see increases of 20 percent, as we saw in California, to see gains of 15 percent in other states, is simply unprecedented," Hartle said. "Tuition is simply being used as a revenue substitute in many states."

The College Board reports roughly 56 percent of 2009-2010 bachelor's degree recipients at public four-years graduated with debt, averaging about $22,000. At private nonprofit universities, the figures were higher – 65 percent and around $28,000. Those figures are likely to rise, though private borrowing – usually more dangerous than government loans – has been falling.

"Psychologically, practically, it's a big number, and it will inform important choices, like when and whether you buy a home, start a family, save for retirement or take the risk of starting a new business," said Lauren Asher, president of The Institute for College Access and Success, who also applauded the Obama announcement.

And Asher and other experts emphasize that the types of loans students take out can be as important as the amount. In general, a college degree remains a good investment.

Other slivers of what passes for good news: While several states had double-digit percentage increases, there were wide variations, and Connecticut and South Carolina held under 3 percent. Roughly half of students are enrolled in nonprofit colleges attend institutions charging under $10,000, and fewer than 1 in 10 attend institutions listing prices over $36,000.

Meanwhile, both community colleges and private four-year colleges reported lower tuition inflation than public universities.

At nonprofit private four-year colleges, tuition and fees were up 4.5 percent to $28,500. Factoring in aid, the average total net cost, including room and board, was about $22,970 – lower than five years ago. At community colleges, where list prices rose 8.7 percent nationally to just under $3,000, net costs also are lower than five years ago, and aid generally covers the whole price.

Still, while net costs are important to note, they don't tell the whole story. They don't cover living costs, which for many students are a higher obstacle than tuition, especially if they can't work as much while enrolled.

And the aid dollars that help lower the average net price don't always go to the neediest students.

Colleges award merit scholarships. Federal Pell Grants do support the neediest, and spending on them has nearly doubled in the last two years to around $35 billion (9.1 million students got grants averaging $3,828).

But the latest College Board figures highlight a rapid recent increase in indirect government support through tuition and other tax credits, which have reached almost $15 billion. Around 12 million people are now taking advantage of tax benefits averaging more than $1,200. And while recent changes make low-income families better able to take advantage of those credits, a growing proportion of the benefit goes to families earning more than $100,000.

The tax credit program, dramatically expanded in 2009, "really changes the story of how the federal government subsidizes students," said Sandy Baum, the economist who directs the College Board's reports. The credit is "not so much a middle-income benefit as we're used to thinking about it."

Some states are not only cutting their appropriations but not even paying what they've promised. Illinois is late on payments worth $500 million to nine campuses this year.

The percentage increases in California, once widely considered to have the best-value public universities in the world, are so high in part because the base prices of past years were low. Prices there still aren't high by national standards, but this year for the first time, California's tuition and fee rates were above the national average. That in 2011 California's public universities would be cost more than the national average would have been unimaginable to most experts a decade ago.

Hartle and others say this year's sharp increases came despite the last chunks of stimulus dollars from Washington used to plug holes in education spending. Looking forward, state budgets remain broken and there's little indication Washington will come riding to the rescue.

"I'm not exactly sure where higher education in the United States is going," he said. "But I have a feeling California is going to get there first."

Also, on Tuesday, an Education Department official testified to a House subcommittee that personal details of as many as 5,000 college students were temporarily visible to other students on the departments' direct loan web site earlier this month.

The episode lasted six or seven minutes on Oct. 12 and happened during a reconfiguration of data on 11.5 million borrowers to improve website performance times, said James Runcie, the Education Department's federal student aid chief operating officer. Students who logged on during that window saw other students' personal details. Those who were exposed were notified and offered credit monitoring services. The department said it had no reason to believe any students' information was misused.

___

On the Net:

www.collegeboard.org

___

Justin Pope covers higher education for The Associated Press. You can reach him at twitter.com/jnn_pope9. AP Education Writer Kimberly Hefling contributed to this report from Washington, D.C.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
04:50 PM on 10/27/2011
These occupy American movement is a fine example of a GOP love fest.. See students have it right. You should want to live as a cub in tent. Tent cities are going to be a much more tight knit community. They just need book police. Many books, Textbooks, E-books, Magazines and Liberal books should be banned. It makes a much nicer community. We also have a come blather prayer time. Where we lay hands on each other and misquote Religious text's to another person's liking. God Bless our perfect GOP world.
03:47 PM on 10/27/2011
I know that we live in a world in which everything is seen as a commodity. Not the least of which is a college education. As a result many hundreds of thousands of potential college students are priced out of the market. This was not always the always the case and I don't believe that we have gained anything by making it so. Of course there have always been private colleges that charged tuition but, in the not too distant past many public colleges and universities either did not charge tuition or charged a minimal fee. Neither the City University of New York (CUNY) nor the University of California (UC) charged tuition until the 1970's (the Reagan years). Yet these two great university systems have produced graduates who have made major contributions to our world. The tuition-free CUNY produced 12 Nobel prize winners and UC Berkley produced 29. In comparison MIT has produced 27 and Yale 18. When we invest in our universities we invest in our own future. The cost of maintaining a low-cost and accessible system of higher education is as valuable as any other use of our tax dollars. For many years we became a strong world power because of our foresight to invest in education for all, what have we gained by making a college education a high-end commodity?
03:31 PM on 10/29/2011
Do you understand why tuition is high? It is supply and demand. When the government supplies and backs tons of cheap money for college tuition the universities experience a spike in demand. This causes them to raise tuition. Who is making money on this what you need to explore? What are certain degrees really worth? The concept that an individual makes a speculative decision to borrow money to attain a degree in hopes that it will pay off in the future. Some people make dumb decisions, all we are doing is sticking the tax payer with a bill when they default because their speculation that spending 50 k on an English lit degree didn't work out. For the record the access to information is easier than it has ever been, when you are going to college you are paying for a certificate that you hope helps you attain gainful employment. The economic ignorance in this country is staggering and will most likely be it's downfall.
07:47 AM on 10/27/2011
When a professor like Elizabeth Warren makes over 300K for teaching one class, it is no shock that the prices are spiraling. When Obama was at Martha's vineyard, he hung out at the homes of college profs... that is some of the priciest real estate in the country. Clearly the 1% contains too many academia types working at subsidized institutions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SouthOfProgress
I think I'll have a bit of a shout now.
06:26 PM on 10/26/2011
Welcome to the Republican States of America!
Sorry folks, we cant go wasting money on socialist endeavors like education.
We have to protect the wealthy.
All you lazy poor people dont really need education anyway.
As soon as we deport or imprison all the immigrants we'll have plenty of migrant labor jobs for you.
Enjoy the decline of your society.
06:58 PM on 10/26/2011
we need money to build fences to keep mexicans out. and then when our country gets bad enough, said fence will keep mexicans in.
03:39 PM on 10/29/2011
So your answer would be to spend more on education? That speculation by students hoping that an English lit degree was a worthy investment of 50k should be wholly backed and bailed out by the federal government. We actually do need an economy that can support that kind of spending. College used to be cheap, because there was little demand for certain degrees. Then someone (government) decided everyone needed to go to college and just study anything. That flow of cheap money has made universities and their employees a very nice living but has done very little for the economically ignorant students who borrowed the 50k to study sociology. This will end badly as it should. You take away the money and prices crash, then people may have to save a few years to go to school. Or maybe a private institution finds their area of study worthy of a loan. Just for the record there is no lock on the library, people could spend their free time gaining an amazing amount of knowledge and utilize that in their daily lives.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
05:45 PM on 10/26/2011
Kudos for the school is a germ party. College tuiton is used in many cases to foster a great labratory. Why don't they make deals with corporations to build small versions of factories at an education level so that a variety of assisting roles can be tried by everyone. Assistants often have very different requirements and the engineering is quite different on each stage; so it is a challenge on certain parts and then to do all of them comfortably students should be exposed to; but not faulted because they are not good at any kind of position although fussing is great. Even if one is not dexterious or illustrative enough to craft it at a professional level. It still is important.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nicko68
03:25 PM on 10/26/2011
This is what OW should be bitching about. Or, the professor with the 1 class/wk schedule making 6 figures.
04:19 PM on 10/26/2011
In some cases. Many professors are actually researchers who then get saddled with some classes. Their primary job is not to teach, but to be in the lab and directing their graduate students for 80 hours a week. You'll notice it in their teaching skills, too, typically.
09:24 PM on 10/26/2011
name a few of those professors.
09:55 PM on 10/26/2011
If you are expressing doubt, you are unfamiliar with our current system of higher education.
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wa0cal
wa0cal
03:10 PM on 10/26/2011
This is a shame. Tuitions are already too high for the young people and at the present how can they pay their student loans off with the job situation as it is.
02:03 PM on 10/26/2011
Why don't these universities, many of which are very liberal, simply cut the pay and perks of the professors, most of whom are also liberal and well paid, and would no doubt be more than happy to pass some of their money on to those less fortunate.
02:08 PM on 10/26/2011
That is because liberals are only concerned with other people's money. When it comes to their own they become down right reactionary.
09:27 PM on 10/26/2011
clearly, neither of you knows the first thing about education. If you actually did research, instead of just picking your noses while watching F*x, you'd find out that salaries vary widely across disciplines and states.

In fact, most college faculty are not very well paid at all. Especially when you consider the amount of research and teaching they do (I know some who have an annual teaching load of 800 students, give or take). They make a middle-class income, but the value they generate is far above that.

But hey - don't let facts get in the way of a typical igno-rant.
01:47 PM on 10/26/2011
Easy answer- State that you are an Illegal Allien on the Application Form and get a Free Education paid for by the American taxpayer through the Dream ACT.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KGP
03:19 PM on 10/26/2011
They still have to pay tuition. They don't get a free ride.
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beerbagger
12-pack of genius
01:38 PM on 10/26/2011
I'm in my late 30's. I think about the soaring costs of education & opportunities all the time now. My parents both worked hard and sacrificed to earn their JD & PhD degrees. While in law school my father enlisted and served with the JAG in Vietnam. While my mother worked as a psychologist at a state juvenile detention facility. In the early 70's, when I was born they had enough money in their bank account to either buy flowers for my mother or cigars for my father to share with his bosses and co-workers at the law office. They had jobs, dare I say careers, they weren't rich, they weren't crushed by tuition and they had zero student loans. They worked and paid as they went to school, my father traded his time for service to the US in a manufactured war.

Both of my parents passed away when I was a young teen. They made sure that I understood how important education was for both me the individual and society as a whole. I've earned two undergraduate degrees and a mountain of student loans, even working full-time while attending college. Graduate school has been on hold for the past 5 years due to the soaring costs of tuition, fear of adding more debt and our terrible economy. I often wonder what my parents would think/feel/say about our current educational costs and limitations. I wonder if they would be disappointed?
11:10 PM on 10/26/2011
Man, I'm sorry you're parents died when you were a teen. That's some rough times. SOME people on this thread don't understand that alot of college kids DO have help from thier parents - whether through a place to live, or kicking in for tuition.
12:18 PM on 10/26/2011
My university­, like many state universiti­es, makes it clear exactly where each of our dollars go. College is and always will be expensive. You have to take out loans, & apply for grants & scholarships. I'm more angry that my Republican legislature keeps slashing budgets for our universities so that programs keep getting cut, classes eliminated, JOBS ARE ELIMINATED and my school becomes less functional and more expensive for me. Meanwhile, they're making it a priority to get a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage like that's going to benefit anyone.
02:15 PM on 10/26/2011
"College is and always will be expensive. You have to take out loans, & apply for grants & scholarshi­ps."

Not necessairly. College tuition skyrockets because students have access to easy credit from the govt. Remove that ability you would see a decrease in costs.

"I'm more angry that my Republican legislatur­e keeps slashing budgets for our universiti­es so that programs keep getting cut, classes eliminated­"

I blame the schools far more then the legislatures. The taxpayers are not there to provide help for increasingly skyrocketing costs the schools are pricing in.

" Meanwhile, they're making it a priority to get a constituti­onal amendment banning gay marriage like that's going to benefit anyone. "

Colleges cost money, banning gay marriage costs nothing.
04:23 PM on 10/26/2011
But if you get rid of student loans (alternatively: just make them dischargeable under bankruptcy), the higher-ed scam will collapse under its own weight....

.... and then your football will disappear too !! Oh noes!
09:29 PM on 10/26/2011
um, do listen up, you absolutemoron - costs go up because everything gets more expensive. As fuel costs rose, so did the cost of heating and cooling the campus, the cost of lights and vehicles required for maintenance, and so on.

Do you think somehow that schools are immune from inflation?

Duhhhhhhhhh.
12:17 PM on 10/26/2011
College tuition is out of control. Student debt will likely be another bubble. We are lucky, my son won an exclusive scholarship that covers tuition, but it's still $10,000 a year just for dorm, meal plan, and books, and they require you to live on-campus the first two years. When he hits graduate school, those loans will be astronomic. I don't understand a country that values war and the rich over education of its people. Seems like it's a race to the bottom, and I personally don't want to be on the bottom of the world's educational scores.
02:17 PM on 10/26/2011
Frankly 10K a year is not a lot. Interesting that people feel entitled to not having debt when the graduate.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KGP
03:22 PM on 10/26/2011
Some good news. If he does really well as an undergrad he can find grad schools that will waive most of his tuition. He'll be able to work at the school. Graduate teaching assistants/instructors make a decent living wage.
04:26 PM on 10/26/2011
Really? What's a "decent" living wage? My grad-student SO makes
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CommonSense411
I live my life by my conscience.
04:33 PM on 10/26/2011
Grad assistants make a great living wage.... for the *two year* they attend graduate school. Then what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nosybear
Liar, damned liar and statistician
12:08 PM on 10/26/2011
That has to be good for the long-term economic growth of our country, right? I mean, who needs all those ejucated peepl?
02:19 PM on 10/26/2011
I don't think long-term economic growth is greatly benefited by the troves useless liberal arts degrees we spend money on. Or do you think that degree in 14th century European Lit. provides some kind of economic stimulus.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CommonSense411
I live my life by my conscience.
04:39 PM on 10/26/2011
Useless liberal arts degrees... right. There is something that those silly 14th century Europeans understood that you clearly DON'T, and that is the effect of highly creative individuals on a civilization. The answer is innovation, moron. How do you think the Renaissance happened? If we don't study the past, enrich ourselves in the creative fields, and nourish the problem-solving skills often learned in those liberal arts classes you skipped in college, we are going to end up with a culture VOID of innovative people.
11:49 AM on 10/26/2011
Misleading headline. The meat of the article shows how drastically tuition went up when we were pouring money into higher ed. This is why the Huff post is almost as funny as the Onion. The joke headlines.
11:49 AM on 10/26/2011
I think its time for a loan forgiveness program!
02:06 PM on 10/26/2011
Let me guess. You have a loan for a degree you can't get a very good job with. I been working every day since I was fifteen and have a little saved up. Let me know where to send it and I will.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KGP
03:24 PM on 10/26/2011
I started working at a grocery store when I was 14. I'm a struggling college student with student loan debt wanting some help. Can you extend that deal to me?