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Public universities will survive. Can public higher education?

Public universities will survive. Can public higher education?. The Clair Maple Memorial Address August 4, 2003 Larry R. Faulkner, President The University of Texas at Austin. Five big forces on public higher education.

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Public universities will survive. Can public higher education?

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  1. Public universities will survive. Can public higher education? The Clair Maple Memorial Address August 4, 2003 Larry R. Faulkner, President The University of Texas at Austin

  2. Five big forces on public higher education • Cost-compounding properties of a labor-intensive activity based on rare talent • Reduced propensity for state subsidy • Resistance to increases in tuition and fees at public institutions • Broadened expectations concerning the economic development role • Tensions among missions

  3. Evolution of a public research university • Budgetary model covering the period through 2020 • Representing this kind of university as it might exist for • Today’s first-graders, entering 2015 • Today’s newborns, entering 2020-2021

  4. Projections based on long-term patterns • Growth of major income streams • State appropriations • Tuition and fees • Endowment income • Research support • Growth in costs of delivery • Salaries • Operating costs • Model for a major public research university

  5. A “typical” major public research university • Medical components not included • 33,000 student FTE • Total budget in 2002-2003 of $1.09 billion • $325 million from state appropriations • $240 million from tuition and fees • $250 million from external research support • $100 million from endowments and gifts • $165 million from auxiliaries • $10 million from other sources

  6. 2003 Income distribution

  7. 2003 Allocation among major functions

  8. 2003 Funding for cost of education

  9. 2003 T&F cost to student has two components

  10. Major growth rates

  11. Other important assumptions • Enrollment remains static at 33,000 student FTE • Any increase in tuition and fees requires a 25% set-aside for financial aid • In 2003, the cost of education was • 70% salaries • 30% operating costs

  12. “Tuition complement model” • Revenue sources other than tuition & fees grow at stated rates • Cost of education evolves “naturally” according to patterns of the last 15 years: • Salaries (initially 70%) at 4.8% • Operating costs (initially 30%) at 3.5% • Tuition and fees grow as needed to cover the cost of education

  13. Total tuition & fee cost to studentsTuition complement model

  14. Annual rates of changeTuition complement model

  15. T&F cost to student vs. median family incomeTuition complement model

  16. 2020 Income distribution Tuition complement model

  17. 2020 Allocation among major functionsTuition complement model

  18. Good news: Model feeds the “natural” growth of the university Preserves the public institution’s ability to compete with private peers Bad news: Not politically sustainable Undercuts the essential public role of a public university Summary of the tuition complement model

  19. “Political limit model” • Revenue sources other than tuition & fees grow at stated rates • Tuition and fees are limited by political reaction to 4.0% annual growth • Salary component of cost of education is limited by total of committed resources including politically limited tuition & fees

  20. Total tuition & fee cost to studentsPolitical limit model

  21. T&F cost to student vs. median family incomePolitical limit model

  22. Annual rates of changePolitical limit model

  23. Uncovered part of “natural” cost of educationPolitical limit model

  24. 2020 Income distribution Political limit model

  25. 2020 Allocation among major functionsPolitical limit model

  26. Good news: Allows the university to retain public support Preserves affordability and access Bad news: Tends to undercut the quality of educational delivery University becomes progressively less competitive for top faculty talent Summary of the political limit model

  27. Probable responses if forces do not change • Tendency to separate educational and research functions organizationally • Impetus to create a special teaching faculty • Political leaders may try to force resources away from research toward education • Research may become increasingly dominant in institutional decision making

  28. Things we can influence: Marginal improvement in growth rate for state support Better political tolerance for changes in tuition and fees through government financial aid Things we can control: Stronger focus in endowment development on quality of educational programs Alter the model for educational delivery to preserve or improve quality at lower cost Toward a more positive future

  29. Keep an eye on the cost control target • Need to reduce the rate of growth in the cost of education by 1.5% to 2.0% per year • Will take imagination to succeed with preservation of quality • Must work on both components of the cost of education • Success will also be applicable to private institutions

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