Abstract
AbstractPrivate nonprofit colleges are increasingly using tuition resets, or a decrease in sticker price by at least 5%, to attract new students and counter declining demand. While discounting tuition with institutional aid is a common practice to get accepted students to matriculate and to increase affordability, a tuition reset is a more transparent approach that moves colleges away from a high aid/high tuition model. The authors find minimal evidence that these policies increase student enrollment in the long run, but that there may be short-term impacts. As expected, institutional aid decreases and varies directly with the size of the sticker price reduction. The average net price students pay decreases, but this effect may be driven by changes in the estimated non-tuition elements of the total cost of attendance. Finally, net tuition revenue appears unrelated to tuition resets. These findings call into question the efficacy of this practice.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference58 articles.
1. Allen, D., & Wolniak, G. C. (2019). Exploring the effects of tuition increases on racial/ethnic diversity at public colleges and universities. Research in Higher Education, 60(1), 18–43.
2. Archibald, R. B., & Feldman, D. H. (2014). Why does college cost so much?. Oxford University Press.
3. Armitage, A. S. (2018). Outcomes of tuition resets at small, private, not-for-profit institutions [Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania]. Scholarly Commons.
4. Askin, N., & Bothner, M. S. (2016). Status-aspirational pricing: The “Chivas Regal” strategy in US higher education, 2006–2012. Administrative Science Quarterly, 61(2), 217–253.
5. Baum, S., & Ma, J. (2010). Tuition discounting: Institutional aid patterns at public and private colleges and universities. Trends in Higher Education Series. College Board.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献