The University as Business
A number of colleges and universities have announced steep
tuition increases for next year—much steeper than the current, very
low, rate of inflation. They say the increases are needed because of
a loss in value of university endowments heavily investing in common S1.______
stock. I am skeptical. A business firm chooses the price that
maximizes its net revenues, irrespective fluctuations in income; S2.______
and increasingly the outlook of universities in the United States is
indistinguishable from those of business firms. The rise in tuitions S3.______
may reflect the fact economic uncertainty increases the demand for S4.______
education. The biggest cost of being in the school is foregoing S5.______
income from a job (this is primarily a factor in graduate-and-profes-
sional-school tuition) ; the poor one’’s job prospects, the more sense S6.______
it makes to reallocate time from the job market to education, in
order to make oneself more marketable.
The ways which universities make themselves attractive to S7.______
students include soft majors, student evaluations of teachers, giving
students a governance role, and eliminate required courses. Sky- S8.______
high tuitions have caused universities to regard their students as
customers. Just as business firms sometimes collude to shorten the S9.______
rigors of competition, universities collude to minimize the cost to
them of the athletes whom they recruit in order to stimulate alumni
donations, so the best athletes now often bypass higher education in
order to obtain salaries earlier from professional teams. And until
they were stopped by the antitrust authorities, the Ivy League
schools colluded to limit competition for the best students, by agreeing
not to award scholarships on the basis of merit rather than purely
of need—just like business firms agreeing not to give discounts on S10.______
their best customer.