State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO)
2004
The State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) produced this 92-page fact book dealing with the finances of higher education at the state level in 2003. It offers lots of important and sometimes counterintuitive information. For example:
- It's "superficial and premature" to conclude that state support for higher ed has been declining in recent years.
- In fact, from 1991 to 2003, per (FTE) pupil funding in public-sector institutions rose 2.1 percent faster than inflation (using a very generous higher-ed specific gauge of inflation measure). The authors make no suggestion that institutional results, effectiveness or productivity also rose during that period. Indeed, one sees here what must be termed declining productivity in U.S. higher education.
- Higher ed enrollments also continue to rise: up 19 percent between 1991 and 2003 (in public institutions).
- The share of total institutional spending (in public colleges/universities) that comes from tuition has risen too, from 26 to 33 percent.
- Not surprisingly, tuition levels (net tuition revenues per FTE student) rose 29 percent during that period, as state appropriations declined 7 percent.
Yes, tuitions are soaring. Yes, students (and parents and aid-suppliers) are bearing a larger share of the total cost of higher ed. But higher ed outlays per student are rising as well. Why? One recalls the old truism: because they can. There's no real pressure for greater efficiency. See for yourself by surfing here.