As I have followed here, Senator Grassley has been poking around in the college world suggesting that the mega-endowed schools ought to be doing more with their endowments. He even has floated the idea that large college endowments spend 5% of their earnings annually mirroring the requirements of private foundations (in order to maintain their nonprofit tax status).
In the race to avoid legislation (not necessarily the race to be better), Thursday's 2-21-08 Wall Street Journal reported that Stanford will "no longer require parents earning less that $100,000 to pay tuition. It said it also will not ask families earning below $60,000 to contribute at all to the cost of their child’s education, including expenses for room and board."
The same article noted that Harvard offers a similar package to Stanford for those earning below $60,000 plus students from families earning up to $180,000 pay 10% or less of income. Dartmouth has free tuition for students earning less that $75,000 a year. The University of Pennsylvania is offering loan-free aid packages to students with families under $100,000 annual income and Yale is giving everything to those families earning less than $60,000 and for those with incomes of between $60,000 and $120,000 the cost is 1-10% of family income. Families earning more than $120,000 pay about 10% of income (kinda like tithing).
So, have these schools avoided Grassley dreaded intentions?
As for me, I am not convinced by the college's offerings. For one thing, just how many students do any of these colleges admit that meet these criteria. These offerings look good on paper but what will this really cost the schools -- even 1/2% annually from the endowments? I think we must applaud the appearance but let's look closer at the real impact. Have the colleges just found a clever way to stave off regulation and continue to amass wealth -- just like their graduates?
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Comments
Re: Grassley "pressure" produces results
by
Anonymous
on Mon 25 Feb 2008 10:51 AM EST | Permanent Link
One question is what would count as a qualified expenditure under Grassley's plan. The WSJ article you linked to reported that Stanford voted last summer to increase endowment spending to 5.5% from 5%, but the new tuition plan would increase spending on financial aid by only 21 million. Total financial aid spending is projected to be 114 million which, as you point out, is less than one percent of their 17 billion dollar endowment.
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Thanks Readers!! The number of folks reading this blog has grown steadily. Unfortunetly, this blog host is not able to handle the traffic and I have moved my blog.