Essay On College Tuition

920 Words2 Pages

As college costs continue to increase, the burdens of paying for the tuition and dealing with student loan debt rise as well. Paying for college has become significantly more difficult as universities keep raising their tuition costs every year. As a result of colleges increasing the cost of tuition, students come out of college with very large amounts of debt. Recent graduates are leaving college with a large amount of student loans; this debt places a heavy burden not only on the students themselves, but also on the entire American economy. Students with more college debt tend to have a harder time increasing wealth and investing. They also delay buying a house, or never buy a house, and spend more of their money on their previously acquired debt than on acquiring new wealth and assets. The focus is shifting from building wealth and obtaining assets to paying off student loan debts and that puts a large strain on the American economy, which will only increase as college cost and debt levels rise.
Higher education has become more difficult to pay for recently due to the fact that colleges continue to increase tuition costs far beyond inflation rates. The average rise of tuition of all colleges is 5.4 percent above inflation every year. Most colleges claim that the government cuts the funding for their institution which forces them to increase the cost of tuition. Between 2000 and 2010, government subsidy to public universities decreased by $2,000 per student. However, this decrease in funding does not equal the rise in tuition cost. Many colleges are competing with other colleges to offer the best education, and instead of increasing efficiency, the colleges decide to increase spending. The growth of spending is what i...

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...the American economy, and are spending that money instead on paying off student loan debts. American spending has been trending away from consumer credit and towards the repayment of student loan debts. The trend away from consumer credit places less dollars into the American economy that, if left to continue at the current rate, it could be disastrous. There are many solutions, but the easiest is either for the colleges to stop increasing their tuitions, or for the government to issue more grants and low interest loans. For colleges to stop the increase in tuition they would have to stop competing with colleges for best campus or technology by purely having massive spending increases. Instead colleges could try to improve efficiencies or reallocate funds to try to drive the cost of tuition down, while still improving the quality of their education.

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