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Priced Out: Higher Education out of reach for low income Michigan families

“Perfect storm” of state funding cuts, rising tuition, and weak state financial aid create college affordability crisis

By: Michael Hubbard

College is not the only road to the American Dream, but it is a proven one. With each successive degree, graduates are more likely to be in the workforce, to be employed, and to earn more. Yet, even as the importance of a college degree has increased, so has the cost of one. College prices have soared across the board, at two-year and four-year schools, and at both public and private institutions. This leaves college financially out of reach for many Americans, puts a large financial burden on those that do attend, and leaves many students with high levels of debt.

On average, yearly tuition, room/board, transportation and fees at a 4-year public college (in-state cost) is $25,000, while at a two-year school is it approximately $17,800.  Take into consideration that the per capita income in Michigan is $30,000, and you’ll see how out of bounds a college education can be.

In past generations, Americans could work through the summer to save enough money to pay their tuition and living expenses. The reality today is that students often must take out tens of thousands in debt to cover their costs and pay their living expenses. The average student loan debt carried by a college graduate is $30,000. For those that end up with valuable degrees, their monthly payments might preclude them from buying a home or starting a business. For those that don’t end up with a degree, that debt can haunt them for the rest of their lives.

A new study shows the state is facing a “college affordability crisis” marked by sharp cuts in state funding to public institutions, rapidly rising tuition levels, and a weak state financial aid system that doesn’t cover the widening gap in students’ unmet financial needs. The report from researchers at The Century Foundation (TCF), a leading national think tank, reveals that the crisis is especially severe for Michigan’s black, Latinx, and low-income families, and has been exacerbated by the state’s worst-in-the-nation wage declines over the last two decades.

According to the report, the core of the affordability crisis is state policy. Lansing has cut state appropriations per student by 40 percent since 2000, and the state invests little in need-based grant aid. Michigan now ranks close to the bottom nationally in terms of the share of state budget spending that goes toward higher education. Michigan also has some of the highest public tuition levels in the nation, forcing many students and families to take on significant debt to attend college.

“Michigan is facing a perfect storm in college affordability,” said Jen Mishory, senior fellow at TCF, and co-author of the new report. “You have a state government that has sharply cut funding to students and failed to address a weak and poorly designed financial aid system. On top of that, tuition, fees, and living costs continue to climb faster and faster, while real wages for most Michigan families have actually fallen. What you’re left with is a system of higher education that is increasingly unequal, unsustainable, and out of reach, especially for those Michiganders most in need.”

The new study, Michigan’s College Affordability Crisis, presents data and analysis on areas such as: state appropriations year-over-year; the structure and scale of state, federal, and institutional financial aid in Michigan; tuition, fees, and the cost of attendance across institutions; and variations due to family race and income and the location and type of institution, among other factors. Taken together, the findings (summarized below) underscore the urgent need to improve college affordability and access in Michigan, particularly for underrepresented students.

“Michigan needs a holistic and bold strategy to address its college affordability crisis,” said Peter Granville, TCF senior associate and co-author of the report. “There are steps that lawmakers in Lansing can begin to take today to strengthen the state’s financial aid system and ease the crushing burden of debt faced by students, all the while paving the ground for more significant affordability reforms and state funding increases down the road.”

The report is the first in a series on the economics of higher education in Michigan. It comes as Governor Whitmer has pledged to prioritize the issue of college affordability in the state, including releasing a plan for tuition-free community college earlier this year.

 

Michigan Higher Education: By the Numbers

 

  1. State Funding: Cutting what is already small

 

  1. State Financial Aid: Meager, cumbersome, and ill-designed to meet state needs

 

  1. Tuition: Rising fees, costs shifting to families

 

  1. Disparities by Race and Income

 

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