Description
Colleges and universities are richer than ever-so why has the price of attending them risen so much?
As endowments and fundraising campaigns have skyrocketed in recent decades, critics have attacked higher education for steeply increasing its production cost and price and the snowballing debt of students. In Wealth, Cost, and Price in American Higher Education, Bruce A. Kimball and Sarah M. Iler reveal how these trends began 150 years ago and why they have intensified in recent decades.
In the late nineteenth century, American colleges and universities began fiercely competing to expand their revenue, wealth, and production cost in order to increase their quality and prestige and serve the soaring number of students. From that era through today, the rising wealth and cost of higher education have continued to reinforce each other and spiral upward, increasing the heavily subsidized price paid by students. Kimball and Iler explain the strategy and reasoning that drove this wealth-cost double helix, the new tactics in fundraising and endowment investing that fueled it, and economists' efforts to understand it.
Using extensive archival, documentary, and quantitative research, Kimball and Iler trace the shifting public perception of higher education and its correlation with rising costs, stagnating wages, and explosive student debt. They show how stratification of wealth in higher education became tightly interwoven with wealth inequality in American society. This relationship raises fundamental questions about equity in US higher education and its contribution to social mobility and democracy.
Colleges and universities are richer than ever-so why has the price of attending them risen so much?
About the Author
Bruce A. Kimball (NEWTON, MA) is Emeritus Academy Professor at Ohio State University. A former Guggenheim Fellow, he is the author of several award-winning books, including Orators and Philosophers: A History of the Idea of Liberal Education and The Inception of Modern Professional Education: C. C. Langdell, 1826-1906. Sarah M. Iler (WAKE FOREST, NC) is adjunct professor of U.S. History at Columbus State Community College and Wake Technical Community College. She is the author or coauthor of essays on topics including the history of African American conservatism, the history of multicultural education, the history of liberal arts education, and the history of endowments in higher education.
Reviews
Kimball and Iler's richly researched, provocative and pivotally important history of college endowments, campus fundraising campaigns, university finances, institutional spending and student debt.
-Steve Mintz, Inside Higher Ed
[Bruce A.] Kimball and Sarah M. Iler explore the historical roots of wealth stratification, lay out the advantages that allow rich universities to get exponentially richer, and propose ways to close the gap with less-wealthy institutions.
-Mike Scutari, Inside Philanthropy
Wealth, Cost & Price in American Higher Education: A Brief History, is indispensable and essential for anyone considering the wealthy university's present and future.
-Joshua Kim, Insider Higher Ed
This is a timely, well researched monograph....we applaud Kimball and Iler for writing this fascinating backstory to the crisis we now face.
-Christopher P. Loss & William Krause, Review of Higher Education
Book Information
ISBN 9781421445007
Author Bruce A. Kimball
Format Hardback
Page Count 336
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 590g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 28mm