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COSTS OF COLLEGE EDUCATION

Costs of College Education (Only tuition fee discussed here)

Sticker versus net price

The general pattern is that most colleges and universities, particularly private ones, have an artificially high and unreliable sticker price while charging most students a discounted price that varies considerably. Some people compare college prices with "airline tickets" since "everybody pays a different fare". 

Another report agreed: Sticker price is the full price colleges list in their brochures and on their websites. Net price is the price students actually pay. Net price accounts for the fact that many students receive grants or scholarships. So it can be considerably lower than sticker price.

Priciest colleges 2012–2013
tuition, room, board, books

School

Cost

New York Univ.

$61,977

Harvey Mudd

$61,760

Bard

$61,446

Rensselaer

$60,779

Sarah Lawrence

$60,656

Wesleyan

$60,214

Dartmouth

$60,201

U. Chicago

$60,039

Bard-Simon's Rk

$60,003

Trinity

$59,860

Discounting began in the 1970s and was dramatically expanded in the 1990s, according to one report. Discrepancy between sticker and average net prices can vary substantially. Estimates vary, but show a consistent pattern of sticker prices being much greater than real costs, sometimes more than double, sometimes only one and half times as high. Estimates are that 88% or 67% get some form of discount. Generally, the sticker-to-net price discrepancy is greater at private colleges than public universities. For example, in 2011-2012, the average sticker price for tuition, fees and living expenses at private colleges, was $38,590 while the average actual cost was $23,060; at public colleges, the average sticker price was $17,130 and the average actual cost was $11,380. Another estimate was that the average full-time undergraduate gets $6,500 in grant aid along with $1,000 in tax-based aid to offset tuition and fees. There is widespread consensus that the most cost-effective college option is community colleges, which charge on average only $3,000 for full-time tuition.

Colleges use high sticker prices because it allows them wide latitude in how to use funds to attract the best students, as well as entice students with special skills or increase its overall racial or ethnic diversity. The most sought-after students can be enticed by high discounts while marginal students can be charged full freight. Further, the high sticker price is a marketing tool to suggest the overall worth of a college education, along the lines of encouraging people to think that "schools that cost more must provide a better education." A report by the Pew Research Center found that while there was growing concern about escalating college prices, most Americans believed that their personal investment in higher education was sound. But discounting adds complexity to decision-making, deterring some students from applying in some instances based on a false sense of unaffordability. 

 

Net price calculators

In the fall of 2011, colleges were required by federal law to post a net price calculator on their websites to give prospective students and families a rough estimate of likely college costs for their particular institution, and to "demystify pricing." A student or family could go online, find the calculator at a college's website, and enter the required financial and academic information, and the calculator should tell them an estimate of the likely cost of attending that college. The first online calculators were started by Williams College. The online calculators look at financial need and academic merit to try to estimate the likely discounted price offered to a particular student from a particular college, using information including details from tax returns, household income, grade point averages and test scores. Schools vary in terms of their pricing formulas; some consider home equity as a factor while others disregard it. We recommend that families shopping for colleges go to a college's website and use the net price calculator to get a personalized estimate of cost. 

Sticker versus net price

Family income $48K-$75K, Total annual cost, Selected colleges 2012

School

Sticker
price

Net price
(avg)

Lafayette

53020

19800

Cornell

55501

27400

New York University

57858

40300

SUNY-Binghamton

20026

19400

U. Chicago

56716

28500

Reed

54800

29400

Berkeley

29027

24300

Swarthmore

54400

20000

Georgetown

55110

26400

Harvard

52652

10600

There are numerous potential problems with the calculators. Some are difficult to find on a college's website; others require specific financial numbers, possibly leading to errors by parents or students; some are difficult to understand and use; some may be manipulated by schools to increase applications or to make it seem as if a college is "more affordable" than it is. Accuracy of calculator estimates may vary considerably from college to college. Ultimately aid decisions will not be made by calculators, but by humans in the admissions offices.

 

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