“One of the Weakest Budget Players in the State”: State Funding of Higher Education at the Onset of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Gándara Denisa1ORCID,Billings Meredith S.2ORCID,Rubin Paul G.3ORCID,Hammond Lindsey4

Affiliation:

1. The University of Texas at Austin

2. Sam Houston State University

3. The University of Utah

4. North Carolina State University

Abstract

Prior studies have documented the pattern of decreased state funding for higher education in periods of economic contraction (i.e., the balance wheel phenomenon). This qualitative case study examines how policymakers in California and Texas made decisions about funding higher education at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when policymakers faced an economic downturn. Data comprise 28 interviews with key state actors and 69 documents. The analysis expands prior understandings of how state policymakers make budgeting decisions that affect higher education by exploring how they perceive certain target populations as deserving or undeserving of state support. The study also sheds light on the tenuous relationship between policymakers’ views of higher education and their funding decisions.

Funder

eunice kennedy shriver national institute of child health and human development

Spencer Foundation

Publisher

American Educational Research Association (AERA)

Subject

Education

Reference87 articles.

1. Media's Impact on Educational Policies and Practices: Political Spectacle and Social Control

2. State Higher Education Spending and the Tax Revolt

3. Bauer L., Broady K., Edelberg W., O’Donnell J. (2020). Ten facts about COVID-19 and the U.S. economy. The Hamilton Project. https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/FutureShutdowns_Facts_LO_Final.pdf.

4. The Politics of Designing Tuition-Free College: How Socially Constructed Target Populations Influence Policy Support

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