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by dpark
3720 days ago
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Professors already make less in academia than they would typically make in the industry. I don't think the best of them would stick around if they were handed a 20% pay cut. Similarly for administrators and coaches, meaningful pay cuts would just push many of them out the door to greener pastures. The cure for high tuition is unlikely to come just from cutting salaries. |
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I've hinted at this elsewhere. There is no reason that anyone should be making more than 100x the minimum a full time worker should be making. I'd propose increasing the marginal rate to something obscene like 90% on income above that point. I stand by it as well.
If we are to make college education free of cost, we have to make them cheaper. I draw parallels here between higher education and healthcare. Yes, customer service will become worse in the process. However, I think if we manage expectations, we can do some serious cost-cutting while maintaining a certain minimum standard. This is true in both education and health care. Anyone who aevocates single payer without conceding that the list of options patient/student shrinks is probably not being honest. But this shrinking is OK.
First thing that should shrink is the obnoxious attachment to collegiate athletics. Even if it were true that college athletics is a net positive for a university's balance sheets, I don't think it is a university's place. This is a part of the overall "remove bling" from education. Other efforts could be trying to find ways to make housing less expensive and not as fancy.
Second thing that should shrink is the myriad of regulations from dozens of sources imposed on universities. I didn't know how many things they have to comply to. This is insane.
But coming to point, professors won't quit if wages go down. If they do, that's fine. There are other professors.