Friday, July 18, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Parliamentobserver
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Business
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Parliamentobserver
Home Economy

A Flawed Report in the Funding Debate

Dennis Rogers by Dennis Rogers
September 29, 2022
in Economy
0
A Flawed Report in the Funding Debate
0
SHARES
11
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

As Idaho’s Legislature considers how much to fund the state’s public colleges, a recent report from the Idaho State Board of Education claims to show the colleges’ economic value to the state. The report is thoughtful and rigorous, but has flaws that diminish its usefulness in the funding debate.

Related posts

HIT-NOT reduces forklift accidents and increases safety in logistics

HIT-NOT reduces forklift accidents and increases safety in logistics

July 7, 2025
FTC Building

FTC Cracks Down on Hidden Charges and “Junk Fees” in New Proposal

October 5, 2024

The report, “The Economic Value of Idaho Public Colleges and Universities,” is an economic impact study estimating that in 2019-2020, these institutions contributed $4.5 billion to Idaho’s gross state product while spending just $1.5 billion, a return of $3 for every $1 spent.

About two-thirds of this $4.5 billion comes from “alumni impact.” In other words, the report claims that graduates provided $3 billion more to Idaho’s economy than they would have if they had not gotten their degrees. It estimates that the institutions’ past expenditures have provided a 16.6% annual return to their alumni and a 4.6% annual return to Idaho’s taxpayers, who subsidize the institutions.

This study avoids the common error of using outlandish multipliers to give inflated estimates of economic value. It even addresses counterfactuals by asking whether some students would go to college elsewhere (and therefore earn similar amounts of money anyway) and how many of them would return to Idaho if their schooling took them out of state.

But some assumptions in the study seem faulty. For example, the authors assume that if Idaho’s public colleges and universities did not exist, students who followed other paths would bring Idaho’s economy only 15 percent of what those alumni now bring in increased earnings. This assumption seems unreasonably pessimistic.

Given the alternative options available in Idaho–at least four significant private colleges/universities plus ways to stay in Idaho while earning online degrees at non-Idaho colleges–15 percent seems far too low. The authors do consider such “alternative education” effects, but even then they claim that Idaho’s economy would only see 23 percent of the alumni impact, still unreasonably low.

Furthermore, the study’s conclusions are not sufficient to justify sizable public investment in Idaho’s public colleges and universities in the future. Demographic trends suggest lower college enrollments ahead as the population of traditional college-aged students shrinks. Additionally, returns to higher education investment will almost certainly diminish as a greater portion of the population receives degrees.

Besides, we know that returns vary substantially by major. A recent report from the Idaho Freedom Foundation shows many programs in which recent alumni have relatively large debt and low income. What programs would be cut first if Idaho reduced higher education funding? Would they be the high-return programs or the negative-return programs? In fact, if colleges did cut the programs that generate negligible value for future alumni, the colleges’ average return would increase.

The financing of higher education is in need of reform throughout the country. Idaho has an opportunity to be a leader in this arena. A forward-looking strategy will empower students to find the best degree programs suited to their talents and interests wherever they are offered, perhaps by attaching state funding to students rather than to institutions. It will also give public colleges and universities incentives to prune programs that have not adequately prepared students for the workforce.

In general, the economic-impact approach to funding misleads policymakers into thinking that increasing public investment would have the same return as previous subsidies: “We’ll get $3 back for every $1 we invest!” But those returns are likely to decline, and it matters where those investments go. This report is no substitute for careful cost-benefit analysis.

Not all higher ed dollars are created equal. Idaho’s legislators should create more incentives for the state’s students and colleges to excel instead of simply maintaining the institutional status quo.

Reprinted from IdahoEdNews.org

Previous Post

Amy Sweeny: Why is this mouse more infected than others?

Next Post

Ludwig von Mises’s Free Market Agenda for a Postwar Ukraine

Next Post
Ludwig von Mises’s Free Market Agenda for a Postwar Ukraine

Ludwig von Mises’s Free Market Agenda for a Postwar Ukraine

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Shifting kiwi: does it work?

Shifting kiwi: does it work?

4 years ago

Putin Explains the Importance of the Minsk Agreement to Zelensky (2019)

3 years ago
Li-ting Zheng: Functionally diverse tree stands with intensive canopy packing reduce herbaceous diversity and productivity

Li-ting Zheng: Functionally diverse tree stands with intensive canopy packing reduce herbaceous diversity and productivity

3 years ago
Canadian Parliament Protest Schwab, Trudeau, & WEF

Canadian Parliament Protest Schwab, Trudeau, & WEF

3 years ago

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

POPULAR NEWS

  • Klaus Schwab – The Most Dangerous Man in the World

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dr. Robert Malone v WEF

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ukraine Adopts WEF Proposals

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trudeau Backs Down After Banks Scream about Massive Withdrawals

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trudeau’s Approval Rating Hits 12-Month Low

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Parliamentobserver

We bring you latest news about ecology, economy, healthcare, politics, education, business.

Recent News

  • JeraSoft Celebrates 20 Years of Trusted Connections
  • PuzzleFree Game Set to Launch in July 2025
  • The $14.6 Billion Question: What the Largest Healthcare Fraud Takedown in History Means for Medical Leaders and Investors

Category

  • Business
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

Recent News

JeraSoft Celebrates 20 Years of Trusted Connections

JeraSoft Celebrates 20 Years of Trusted Connections

July 11, 2025
PuzzleFree Game Set to Launch in July 2025

PuzzleFree Game Set to Launch in July 2025

July 10, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© 2022 parliamentobserver.com Submit news release

No Result
View All Result
  • Ecology
  • Economy
  • Healthcare
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Business

© 2022 parliamentobserver.com Submit news release

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In