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by hga
5769 days ago
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A large group of top-tier universities and colleges were caught colluding on financial aid packages. Their thesis was they didn't want the cost to the student and his family to bias the decision of which to accept, but one can also surmise that eliminating financial competition had additional motives. |
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1. It costs more to provide grants to poorer students. 2. More competition (demand) and fixed supply increases the price of the good.
I'm unqualified to talk on the first point, and it seems kind of a stretch.
On the second point, I don't see how having more poor students lets you earn more. I suppose one possibility is that the government subsidy plays a huge role and the university is trying to tap into those funds. If not, I don't see how the increased demand would drive the price up. If you're admitting richer kids, they'd have the money to fork over anyway.
But I could just be missing something.