なぜ米国の大学は学費が高いのか<br>Why Does College Cost So Much?

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なぜ米国の大学は学費が高いのか
Why Does College Cost So Much?

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 304 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780190214104
  • DDC分類 378.1060973

Full Description

Much of what is written about colleges and universities ties rapidly rising tuition to dysfunctional behavior in the academy. Common targets of dysfunction include prestige games among universities, gold plated amenities, and bloated administration. This book offers a different view. To explain rising college cost, the authors place the higher education industry firmly within the larger economic history of the United States. The trajectory of college cost is similar to cost behavior in many other industries, and this is no coincidence. Higher education is a personal service that relies on highly educated labor. A technological trio of broad economic forces has come together in the last thirty years to cause higher education costs, and costs in many other industries, to rise much more rapidly than the inflation rate. The main culprit is economic growth itself.

This finding does not mean that all is well in American higher education. A college education has become less reachable to a broad swathe of the American public at the same time that the market demand for highly educated people has soared. This affordability problem has deep roots. The authors explore how cost pressure, the changing wage structure of the US economy, and the complexity of financial aid policy combine to reduce access to higher education below what we need in the 21st century labor market.

This book is a call to calm the rhetoric of blame and to instead find policies that will increase access to higher education while preserving the quality of our colleges and universities.

Contents

Part 1 - Introduction ; Chapter 1: The Landscape of the College Cost Debate ; Chapter 2: Is Higher Education All That Unusual? ; Part 2 - Costs ; Chapter 3: Higher Education is a Service ; Chapter 4: The Costs of Employing Highly Educated Workers ; Chapter 5: Cost and Quality in Higher Education ; Chapter 6: The Bottom Line: Why Does College Cost So Much? ; Chapter 7: Is Higher Education Increasingly Dysfunctional? ; Chapter 8: Productivity Growth in Higher Education ; Part 3 - Tuition and Fees ; Chapter 9: Subsidies and Tuition Setting ; Chapter 10: List-Price Tuition and Institutional Grants ; Chapter 11: Outside Financial Aid ; Chapter 12: The College Affordability Crisis ; Part 4 - Policy ; Chapter 13: Federal Policy and College Tuition ; Chapter 14: Financial Aid Policy ; Chapter 15: Rewriting the Relationship between States and Their Public Universities ; Chapter 16: A Few Final Observations ; Appendix 1: Data on Costs and Prices ; Appendix 2: Granger Causality Tests of the Bennett Hypothesis