How much does it cost to attend college in the United States today? The answer is more complex than many realize. College websites advertise a sticker price, but uncovering the actual price--the one after incorporating financial aid--can be difficult for students and families. This inherent uncertainty leads some students to forgo applying to colleges that would be the best fit for them, or even not attend college at all. The result is that millions of promising young people may lose out on one of society's greatest opportunities for social mobility. Colleges suffer too, losing prospective students and seeing lower enrollments and less socioeconomic diversity. If markets require prices to function well, then the American higher-education system--rife as it is with ambiguity in its pricing--amounts to a market failure.
In A Problem of Fit, economist Phillip B. Levine explains why institutions charge the prices they do and discusses the role of financial aid systems in facilitating--and discouraging--access to college. Affordability issues are real, but price transparency is also part of the problem. As Levine makes clear, our conversations around affordability and free tuition miss a larger truth: that the opacity of our current college-financing systems is a primary driver of inequities in education and society. In a clear-eyed assessment of educational access and aid in a post-COVID-19 economy, A Problem of Fit offers a trenchant new argument for educational reforms that are well within reach.
One of the oldest & largest university presses in the US & a distinguished publisher of trade and scholarly books and journals. Refining minds since 1891!
Congratulations to Phillip Levine's A PROBLEM OF FIT, which has been named one of "The Best Higher Education Books of 2022" by @Forbes https://t.co/t5kuvgYJSD https://t.co/E6zDur2KbP
Helping you make sense of #HigherEducation. Follow us for the latest news, opinions, jobs, and resources. Send #HigherEd news and tips via DM.
Author explains his book on “how the complexity of college pricing hurts students and universities.” https://t.co/IQivC8WIw9
Fast-breaking business news in the world's leading tech hub. Follow us for exclusive news on Silicon Valley tech, real estate, entrepreneurs and executives.
Phillip Levine, economics professor and author of a new book titled “A Problem of Fit,” spoke with The Business Journals about what it would take to reform the financial-aid system and how different sectors of higher ed address college pricing. https://t.co/X1mptq5XCJ