Education Subsidies and Bad Schools: Breaking the Causal Link

Jack L. Millman
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Abstract

Government subsidies for higher education suffer from serious design defects that contribute to seemingly contradictory problems — (1) too few individuals earn college degrees because the United States underinvests in prospective students and (2) too many students enroll in bad schools that leave them and society worse off than before they enrolled. Why would students overinvest in bad schools while underinvesting in education generally? Regarding underinvestment, many scholars have commented on how current aid is poorly targeted and fails to adequately encourage potential students who would otherwise not enroll in and graduate from an institution of higher education to do so. Regarding overinvestment, while many theories have been proposed, such as misleading advertising, an important but overlooked reason is that too high a percentage of student aid ends up encouraging prospective students to invest in bad schools. This misdirected aid exacerbates other problems that can lead prospective students to enroll in bad schools and can even be the sole reason a student chooses to enroll in a bad school. And while government regulations do attempt to prevent bad schools from receiving aid, those regulations are not working. To succeed, policymakers need to clearly define what a bad school is and understand bad schools’ root causes. After proposing a definition (a school in which the aggregated matriculating students’ estimated return, including personal consumption, is negative), I argue that bad schools are generally caused by two problems — unprepared students and underperforming schools. Schools target unprepared students who will not benefit from enrolling to obtain government aid. Unprepared students enroll due to a combination of market failures and badly designed subsidies. Schools are also able to underperform compared to their peers because of the flawed design of subsidies and related market failures. Current government regulations somewhat target these problems, but struggle due to the lack of a coherent underlying philosophy and a failure to more directly target the underlying issues. After discussing how the design of subsidies contributes to the problems, I propose possible reforms, including adding several indicators of school performance to the Government’s Gainful Employment Rule, which currently has just one real proxy (debt-to-earnings).
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教育补贴与劣质学校:打破因果关系
政府对高等教育的补贴存在严重的设计缺陷,导致了看似矛盾的问题:(1)获得大学学位的人太少,因为美国对潜在学生的投资不足;(2)太多的学生进入了糟糕的学校,这使得他们和社会的状况比他们入学前更糟。为什么学生们会在糟糕的学校过度投资,而在教育方面普遍投资不足?关于投资不足,许多学者评论说,目前的援助目标不明确,未能充分鼓励那些本来不会进入高等教育机构并从高等教育机构毕业的潜在学生这样做。关于过度投资,虽然人们提出了许多理论,比如误导性广告,但一个重要但被忽视的原因是,过高比例的学生资助最终鼓励了未来的学生投资于糟糕的学校。这种误导的资助加剧了其他问题,可能导致未来的学生进入糟糕的学校,甚至可能是学生选择进入糟糕学校的唯一原因。虽然政府法规确实试图阻止差学校接受援助,但这些法规并没有起作用。为了取得成功,政策制定者需要清楚地定义什么是坏学校,并了解坏学校的根本原因。在提出了一个定义(一所学校的入学学生的综合估计回报(包括个人消费)为负)之后,我认为,糟糕的学校通常是由两个问题造成的——没有准备好的学生和表现不佳的学校。学校的目标是没有准备的学生,他们不会从入学中受益,以获得政府援助。由于市场失灵和设计糟糕的补贴,毫无准备的学生入学。与同类学校相比,学校之所以表现不佳,还因为补贴设计存在缺陷以及相关的市场失灵。目前的政府法规在一定程度上针对了这些问题,但由于缺乏连贯的基本理念和未能更直接地针对潜在问题而陷入困境。在讨论了补贴的设计是如何导致这些问题的之后,我提出了可能的改革建议,包括在政府的有酬就业规则(Gainful Employment Rule)中增加几个学校表现指标,该规则目前只有一个真正的代理(债务与收入之比)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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