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  5. Does Public Funding for Higher Education Matter?

Does Public Funding for Higher Education Matter?

File(s)
cheri_wp92.pdf (64.31 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/74698
Collections
Cornell Higher Education Research Institute (CHERI)
ILR Working Papers
Author
Zhang, Liang
Abstract

This study uses panel data to examine the direct link between state funding and graduation rates at four-year public institutions. When other factors are held constant, a $1,000 increase in state appropriations per FTE student at four-year public institutions is associated with about a one percentage point increase in graduation rates. This positive link appears to hold for all research/doctoral, masters, and baccalaureate institutions. In addition, there is evidence that modest increases (or a decrease) in state funding are associated with rapid increases in tuition rates charged at four-year public institutions, which likely result in an additional negative impact on graduation rates. Simply put, there is no such a thing as free lunch when it comes to graduation rates at public higher education institutions.

Date Issued
2006-10-10
Keywords
higher education
•
public universities
•
public funding
•
graduation rates
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: Published by the Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, Cornell University.
Type
article

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