1. State Fiscal Constraints and Higher Education Spending: The Role of Medicaid and the Business Cycle. Discussion Paper.
- Author
-
Brookings Institution, Washington, DC., Urban Inst., Washington, DC., Kane, Thomas J., Orszag, Peter R., and Gunter, David L.
- Abstract
This study used state-level data on expenditures since 1977 to study the forces underlying the shift in state financing of higher education. The focus is on interactions between state appropriations for higher education, other state budget items, especially Medicaid, and the business cycle. The first section documents the substantial decline in state support for higher education over the past two decades. The second section examines the causes of that decline, focusing particularly on expansions in the Medicaid program and the implications for state higher education spending. The third section explores the effects of the business cycle on higher education subsidies. The fourth section briefly examines the impact of declines in state appropriations for higher education on the relative quality of public higher education institutions, which is to be discussed in more detail in a forthcoming companion paper. The principal reason offered for trends in state financing of higher education is fiscal pressure from other state budget requirements. The underlying story that emerges from this analysis is that pressure from other state budget items, especially Medicaid, has been crowding out appropriations for higher education. The pattern from the 1990s suggests that reductions in higher education appropriations are implemented during an economic downturn and then made permanent by failing to raise appropriations substantially during the subsequent economic recovery. (Contains 23 figures, 12 tables, and 35 references.) (SLD)
- Published
- 2003