The phrase “rising college costs” has become so characteristic to the topic of higher education that it seems virtually bound to the debate.
Recently, while on a bus tour to several colleges in Pennsylvania and New York, President Obama made attempts to decouple this phrase when he presented a new proposal to link the amount of federal financial aid to college performance, which would in turn lead to a reduction in cost of higher education across the country. It is, in essence, attempting to shame colleges into offering better aid to their students.
With his new plan, more federal aid would be granted to schools that lower their costs for students, and schools that fail to halt tuition increases would face cuts in the federal aid they receive.
A press release from the White House that referred to Census data stated that “the average tuition at a public four-year college has increased by more than 250% over the past three decades, while incomes for typical families grew by only 16%.” It went on to illustrate the growing concern of rising loan default rates, and decreasing graduation rates.
Obama’s proposed restructuring of Pell grants into an incremental disbursement system gives students money in a more structured way so that if a student drops out, they are not still receiving Pell grant money while not in school. According to the White House, President Obama also plans to give colleges a bonus based on the number of Pell grant students they actually graduate, not just the number of Pell grant students they enroll.
Low-income students are more likely to attend colleges with lower graduation rates, and often take much longer to graduate, but with the president’s new plan, student aid will be connected to student outcome, which will put pressure on schools to graduate their students, and help encourage students not to drop out.
The president also wants to cap student loan payments at 10% of an individual’s monthly income. This would help all students, but in particular low income students, to manage their debt so that fewer students default on payments, and the high cost of college becomes less of a deterrent for attending.
This plan comes at a time when Obama is trying to emphasize his commitment to helping the middle class. He made his position clear in an email that was sent out to supporters:
“Just tinkering around the edges won’t be enough: To create a better bargain for the middle class, we have to fundamentally rethink about how higher education is paid for in this country. We’ve got to shake up the current system.”
If passed, this plan would change the government’s role in higher education. Previously, it has limited itself to simply dispensing financial aid based on the number of students attending each school, but with Obama’s new proposal, it would assert itself into a more regulatory role, serving to classify institutions with a larger set of criteria. Turning the college decision process into more of an equation has its risks though; it relies on data that is at times inaccurate or incomplete, and also switches a lot of the focus to the limited perspective of job preparation.
The Department of Education already has a rating system set in place to determine the affordability of different schools, with an interactive “college scorecard” and “college navigator” that allows potential students to compare different schools’ costs, graduation rates, loan default rates, and employment after graduation. Obama’s new plan would update the system, which currently has very spotty data, and then connect it to the amount of federal financial aid each college receives for its students.








