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ESSAYS ON ISSUES

THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF CHICAGO

JANUARY 2006
NUMBER 222a

Chicago Fed Letter
Higher education and economic growth
by Richard H. Mattoon, senior economist

The future of higher education and its relationship to economic growth were the focus of
a one-day conference at the Chicago Fed on November 2, 2005. Cosponsored by the bank,
the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, and the Midwestern Higher Education Compact,
the event brought together over 100 academic, business, and government leaders.

The perception of higher education as an important public
good has eroded. Higher education is viewed by some as a
private good with the benefits
accruing to the student in the
form of higher future wages
and quality of life.

In opening remarks, Chicago Fed President and CEO Michael Moskow noted
that while the relationship between
education, productivity, and economic
growth has never been clearer, financial
support for higher education has waned
while costs have continued to rise.1 While
private universities have been able to
raise tuition and draw on endowments
to maintain fiscal health, public universities have faced difficult times as states
have reduced financial support and
often limited their ability to offset cuts
with large tuition increases. Moskow
noted that state governments are facing
competing demands for funding from
K–12 education and Medicaid, among
other priorities. Also, the perception
of higher education as an important
public good has eroded. Increasingly,
Moskow said, higher education is seen
as a private good with the benefits accruing to the student in the form of
higher future wages and quality of life.

Moskow suggested several strategies for
restoring the higher education social
compact. First, universities must be more
transparent in their operations. Part of
this transparency includes more tightly
defining the mission of the university in
meeting the multiple goals of education,
research, and public outreach. Moskow
recommended that institutions make
explicit how money is spent and what
resources are available to ensure that

tuition is not a barrier to attendance for
talented students regardless of income.
Finally, Moskow urged higher education
to address graduation rates that currently
hover around 50%.
Next, Michael McPherson, president of
the Spencer Foundation, discussed measures of the affordability of higher education for private individuals and the public.
McPherson argued that the real question here is how public resources should
be allocated between rich and poor students and among different types of institutions to achieve an optimal distribution
for society. Is it more efficient to invest
in our most talented students and our
best institutions, or can more gains be
made for the economy by increasing
resources to community colleges and
nontraditional student populations?
McPherson cited a study2 that found that
family income and parental education are
still major predictors of academic success.
Students from the top income quartile
receive a combined SAT score of 1200
or better by a ratio of six to one over
students from the lowest income quartile. A similar ratio holds for students
with at least one parent who graduated
from college versus students without a
parent who graduated from college.
Offering a perspective from the front
lines, B. Joseph White, president of the
University of Illinois, characterized
the three campuses of the University

of Illinois as the most valuable assets
that the state possesses to ensure that
globalization benefits rather than harms
Illinois residents. However, the university’s financial constraints represent a
significant obstacle.
Currently, the university provides an education per student that has a price tag
of $25,000; however, it charges the students only $8,000 to $10,000 each. The
clear message from the state government
is that the university must develop other
funding sources to supplement state support. These options include increasing
revenue from tuition, having faculty find
external sources of funding to support
their research, and raising more private
donations and endowments. Finally,
leadership is needed to push cost reductions and increase productivity.
In conclusion, White cautioned that
the approach of running a university
like a business may not be the answer.
Such an approach would raise tuition
to levels that would be prohibitive for
many students and lead to the closing
of financially unattractive operations
that are often critical to the mission of
the university.
Higher education finance

Professor and former provost Paul
Courant of the University of Michigan
and Professor Richard Vedder of Ohio
University and the American Enterprise
Institute offered perspectives on what
drives higher education costs. Courant
began by asking:
• How is a university like, and not like,
a business?
• Why does tuition keeps rising faster
than the cost of living?
• How happy or unhappy should we
be about the answers to the first
and second questions, or in other
words, how close are universities to
producing educated citizens and
research efficiently?
Courant argued that a major research
university like the University of Michigan
is similar to a multiproduct firm with
many lines of work, from education provision and basic and applied research to
benefits and services, such as health care

and athletics. In addition, the university
takes advantage of shared inputs across
its business units to provide some cost and
quality advantages. While universities
tend to operate as high-quality firms,
administration and coordination issues
also tend to make them have high production costs. Clearly, a university is not
a profit-maximizing firm; rather, a university tries to maximize some notion of

source that the administration has some
control over. The guiding principle is for
tuition to rise as little as possible, but
enough to maintain quality.
Vedder offered some other ideas on college costs. He noted that college costs
(as measured by the college tuition fee
price index of the U.S. Department of
Labor) have risen faster than even the

While the public is concerned with accountability, competition at
both the national and international levels leads universities to
make the investments to stay on top.
knowledge-based value. So, how good
are universities at doing this? How should
they be governed and in whose interest?
The second issue concerns tuition outstripping the Consumer Price Index.
In addition to the impact of declining
revenues from other sources, e.g., state
government, the following three reasons
underlie rising tuition:
• Baumol’s disease, the term coined
by William Baumol to explain the
growth of costs in the theater, suggests that in certain fields (e.g., the
theater) technical change does little
to increase productivity because basic
inputs (e.g., actors and costumes) are
still needed. Since wages still grow
to keep pace with other industries,
costs tend to grow at the overall
rate of inflation plus productivity.
• The role of the university as a conservatory implies that higher education
institutions cannot do all of their innovation through substitution. They
need to retain knowledge of the past.
• Finally, the need to stay on the cutting edge implies increasing technology costs. And competitive pressure
to retain the best faculty puts pressure on wages.
Given declining public tax support (the
state of Michigan’s appropriations for
general fund expenditures is now less
than one-quarter of the budget compared with one-third three years ago),
tuition becomes the major revenue

health care cost index, and have more
than doubled in real terms since 1980.
Of greater concern is that increases in
tuition cost have eclipsed increases in
family income.
A key dynamic is surging student demand,
which is at least partially driven by the
availability of government-sponsored and
other financial aid. Because much of the
cost of tuition is covered by third parties,
the primary consumers remain relatively
insensitive to price hikes. Another factor driving costs has been languishing
productivity. Most university instruction
is delivered in the same manner as it was
generations ago. Even if instructional
productivity has remained constant, it has
fallen relative to other segments of the
economy. Finally, staffing levels outside
the classroom have grown considerably.
Today, there are six nonfaculty professional staff per 100 students versus three
in 1976. Indeed, Vedder estimates that,
since the mid-1970s, only about $0.21 of
each inflation-adjusted dollar has actually
gone toward instruction.
Schools have also become better at price
discrimination, meaning they charge different consumers different amounts of
tuition based on the perceived intensity
of demand. When this is done successfully, it increases the aggregate tuition
yield. There are also issues of cross-subsidy
between various functions on campus—
research, athletics, undergraduate education, and graduate education—that make
pricing less transparent.

Vedder questioned the role that public
spending on higher education has on
economic growth. He cited research
that suggests states that spend more on
higher education have lower economic
growth rates.
In contrast to public higher education,
Vedder noted that for-profit universities,
such as the University of Phoenix and
Strayer University, appear to be thriving.
The role of the for-profit university was
the focus of remarks by Robert Silberman,
chairman and CEO of Strayer Education.
Like traditional colleges, Strayer focuses
on the value of education that it provides to its students. However, it must
also pay attention to its return on capital and market returns to investors. In
addition, Strayer’s revenue must equal
the cost of providing education because
it does not have other revenue sources
such as endowments or government
funding. As a for-profit entity, Strayer has
to pay taxes, and it cannot raise tuition
indefinitely or it will lose market share.
Strayer’s business model focuses on working adults and offers a limited number
of academic disciplines and limited campus facilities to hold costs down. It also
offers an online university to reach students who cannot attend a campus. This
model has proven successful enough to
attract investments from public universities that have purchased Strayer stock
through their endowments.
Silberman cited three drivers of Strayer’s
success. First, there is is open enrollment.
Strayer graduates large numbers of minorities and admits students regardless of
high school record, as long as they have
graduated. Second, the program promotes academic rigor. Strayer is regionally accredited and offers BAs, MBAs,
and technical degrees. Third, high student achievement is required. Between
5% and 10% of Strayer’s student population fail each quarter.
Silberman concluded that Strayer’s
success is based on efficient use of assets and a different student focus. The
school doesn’t have to offer amenities
or pay for expensive real estate. It is also
not paying for a research-oriented faculty. He cited a recent survey showing
that earnings of Strayer graduates rose

from $28,000 to $57,000 in two years
after graduation.

from a manufacturing center to a
knowledge center.

Adapting to the knowledge economy

Challenges identified by higher
education leaders

James Duderstadt, president emeritus
of the University of Michigan, focused
on the role of higher education in driving economic transformation. In the
Midwest, a new industrial production
paradigm has emerged that places a high
value on knowledge institutions, such as
research universities, corporate research
and development laboratories, and national research agencies, for creating advanced education, research innovation,
and entrepreneurship.
Duderstadt argued that the region needs
to develop a strategic plan, such as the
Michigan Roadmap,3 to harness these
economic forces. Michigan’s economy is
facing significant challenges. Its largest
city, Detroit, is among the poorest in the
nation, and one of its major industries,
domestic autos, is suffering staggering
losses. One-quarter of the state’s adult
population lacks a high school diploma
and only one-third of its high school
graduates is college ready. Yet, the state
has a system of higher education that is
regarded as among the finest in the nation, although it too is beginning to suffer from a withdrawal of state support.
Duderstadt suggested that the concentration of strong flagship research universities in the Midwest represents a
unique asset, which policymakers and
business leaders should leverage. The
Big Ten universities along with the
University of Chicago conduct $6 billion per year in research and development; enroll 300,000 undergraduate
and 76,000 graduate students; and award
20% of the nation’s doctorates in engineering, chemistry, mathematics, and
computer science. For the region’s economy to succeed, Duderstadt argued,
these institutions must be at the heart
of the strategy.
Such a strategy requires a coalition
among leaders from all sectors, including business and industry, state and local
government, higher education, foundations, and the media. This coalition
could promote and ultimately benefit
from the transformation of the Midwest

Lou Anna Simon, president, Michigan
State University; Paul Courant, professor and former provost, University of
Michigan; and Richard Saller, provost,
University of Chicago, shared their views
on the challenges facing their own and
many other institutions. Simon noted
that the universities’ core mission of providing access to cutting edge knowledge
and democratizing information is unchanged. But higher education must
restore public trust that it provides access in an inclusive fashion, and it must
make the benefits of basic, applied, and
commercial research readily apparent.
Courant pointed out that universities
have a moral hazard problem when it
comes to promoting their value to society,
since it is obviously to their benefit to
show they deserve significant public
resources. It might be easier, therefore,
for the business community to make the
case that developing basic and applied
research and educating the work force
are important issues of public policy.
Saller offered the perspective of a private
research university. Saller suggested
Michael H. Moskow, President; Charles L. Evans,
Senior Vice President and Director of Research; Douglas
Evanoff, Vice President, financial studies; David
Marshall, Vice President, macroeconomic policy research;
Richard Porter, Vice President, payment studies;
Daniel Sullivan, Vice President, microeconomic policy
research; William Testa, Vice President, regional
programs and Economics Editor; Helen O’D. Koshy,
Kathryn Moran, and Han Y. Choi, Editors; Rita
Molloy and Julia Baker, Production Editors.
Chicago Fed Letter is published monthly by the
Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Chicago. The views expressed are the
authors’ and are not necessarily those of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago or the Federal
Reserve System.
© 2006 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Chicago Fed Letter articles may be reproduced in
whole or in part, provided the articles are not
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Prior written permission must be obtained for
any other reproduction, distribution, republication, or creation of derivative works of Chicago Fed
Letter articles. To request permission, please contact
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on the Bank’s website at www.chicagofed.org.
ISSN 0895-0164

that higher education benefits from intense competition. While the public is
concerned with accountability, competition at both the national and international levels leads universities to make
the investments to stay on top. In global
rankings, American universities continue
to dominate, but a disturbing trend is
the increasing stratification between private and public universities. Generally,
private universities have had greater flexibility in raising tuition, larger endowments, and more stable funding.
The three panelists agreed that communication was at the center of the higher
education problem. Simon suggested
that universities often fail to speak the
language of the public, and this tends
to create distrust. Saller noted that more
work needs to be done on the tangible
outcomes from higher education spending, and cited a study by University of
Chicago economists Robert Topel and
Kevin Murphy that demonstrated a huge
return to society from university research
funded by National Institutes of Health
grants. Research on the returns from
other aspects of higher education
spending would be useful.
North Dakota—A statewide effort to
improve higher education

The next panel discussed the North Dakota Roundtable on Higher Education,
set up in 1998 to reform the state’s higher education system. The panelists were

Larry Isaak, former chancellor, North
Dakota University System, and president,
Midwestern Higher Education Compact;
State Senator Ray Holmberg, chair,
Higher Education Roundtable, and chair,
North Dakota Senate Appropriations
Committee; Eddie Dunn, vice chancellor,
North Dakota University System; Joseph
Chapman, president, North Dakota
State University; and Roger Rierson,
president, Flint Communications, and
Higher Education Roundtable member.
In 1998, North Dakota had a struggling
economy and a higher education system
that was not seen as important to the
state’s economic future. There was little
cooperation among universities, government, and the private sector, and the
popular perception was that the university system was a financial burden.
The roundtable developed a consensus
on how the North Dakota University
System could best focus its assets and talents. It has focused universities on placing students first, expanding program
offerings while bolstering quality, and
leveraging external support. Enrollment
at North Dakota State University grew
from 9,700 in 1999 to over 12,000 in
2005. Doctoral programs expanded from
15 to 40, and doctoral students increased
from 150 to 500. Research expenditures soared from $44 million in 1999
to $102 million in 2005. Importantly,
the new entrepreneurial and resultsoriented culture is paying real dividends

to the state. The most recent study of
the economic impact of the university
on the state’s economy has shown its
contribution rising from $14 million
to $105 million in just five years. Each
additional dollar of state funds is now
attracting $9.60 of external support.
Conclusion

The conference made it clear that traditional models of higher education finance and service delivery are under
stress. Declining financial support from
state sources appears to be a structural
issue, and changing student demographics require new service delivery models.
The question for policymakers is this:
If higher education is essential to economic growth, how do we best support
this critical sector?
1

The agenda and presentations, as well as
an expanded, online-only edition of Chicago
Fed Letter summarizing the conference,
are available at www.chicagofed.org.

2

William G. Bowen, Martin A. Kurzweil,
and Eugene M. Tobin, 2005, Equity and
Excellence in American Higher Education,
Charlottesville, VA: University Press of
Virginia.

3

James J. Duderstadt (project director),
2005, A Roadmap to Michigan’s Future:
Meeting the Challenge of a Global KnowledgeDriven Economy, University of Michigan,
Millennium Project, report, available at
http://milproj.ummu. umich.edu/
publications/roadmap/index.html.