Difference between revisions of "US/education/higher/price"

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Others argue that higher education prices are caused by low-interest student loans causing artificially-high demand for college education, leading to higher prices via the [[law of supply and demand]]. While this is certainly part of the mechanism, it doesn't explain what caused the political demand for low-interest student loans; it essentially [[pockets the question]] of what is causing the change.
 
Others argue that higher education prices are caused by low-interest student loans causing artificially-high demand for college education, leading to higher prices via the [[law of supply and demand]]. While this is certainly part of the mechanism, it doesn't explain what caused the political demand for low-interest student loans; it essentially [[pockets the question]] of what is causing the change.
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 +
===Reference===
 +
* about.com: [http://collegesavings.about.com/od/understandingcollegecosts/a/risingcosts.htm Understanding the Skyrocketing Costs of a College Education]
 +
===to file===
 
* '''1996-03''' [https://nces.ed.gov/pubs/96769.pdf Findings from The Condition of Education 1995 - #6: The Cost of Higher Education] (PDF) by [[National Center for Educational Statistics]], [[US Department of Education]]
 
* '''1996-03''' [https://nces.ed.gov/pubs/96769.pdf Findings from The Condition of Education 1995 - #6: The Cost of Higher Education] (PDF) by [[National Center for Educational Statistics]], [[US Department of Education]]
 
* '''2003''' [http://www.highereducation.org/reports/affordability_supplement/affordability_1.shtml The Rising Price of Higher Education] by William Trombley, senior editor at the [[National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education]] "State spending for public colleges and universities dropped sharply last year..."
 
* '''2003''' [http://www.highereducation.org/reports/affordability_supplement/affordability_1.shtml The Rising Price of Higher Education] by William Trombley, senior editor at the [[National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education]] "State spending for public colleges and universities dropped sharply last year..."
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* '''2013-03-16''' [http://www.dailyfinance.com/on/college-costs-tuition-rising-student-debt-infographic/ The High Cost of Higher Education Explained in One Simple Graphic]: infographic
 
* '''2013-03-16''' [http://www.dailyfinance.com/on/college-costs-tuition-rising-student-debt-infographic/ The High Cost of Higher Education Explained in One Simple Graphic]: infographic
 
* '''2013-05-23''' [https://outoftexas.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/the-rising-costs-of-higher-education/ The Rising Costs of Higher Education]: interest rates, internships
 
* '''2013-05-23''' [https://outoftexas.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/the-rising-costs-of-higher-education/ The Rising Costs of Higher Education]: interest rates, internships
==Reference==
+
==Notes==
* about.com: [http://collegesavings.about.com/od/understandingcollegecosts/a/risingcosts.htm Understanding the Skyrocketing Costs of a College Education]
+
* [https://plus.google.com/u/0/102282887764745350285/posts/3VES943nneN asked questions, got answers]: some history and links

Latest revision as of 13:56, 24 June 2013

About

The cost of tuition at colleges and universities in the United States has been rising at a rate far exceeding that of inflation. There seem to be a number of drivers behind this phenomenon, including jobsolescence (fewer jobs to go around, so people are more desperate for an "edge" to give themselves or their kids) and reduced government funding for public higher education.

Entrepreneur Peter Thiel argues that higher education prices are in a "bubble", which will collapse at some point in the near future.[1]

Others argue that higher education prices are caused by low-interest student loans causing artificially-high demand for college education, leading to higher prices via the law of supply and demand. While this is certainly part of the mechanism, it doesn't explain what caused the political demand for low-interest student loans; it essentially pockets the question of what is causing the change.

Links

Reference

to file

Notes