Tuition at public four-year colleges and universities rose 112.5 percent between 1990-1991 and 2010-2011. Here's a big part of the explanation:
- From 1990-1991 to 2010-2011, total state appropriations rose from $65.1 billion to $75.6 billion. But state funding actually declined in relative terms.
- If states had provided the same level of per capita support as in 1990-1991, they would have invested $80.7 billion in 2010-2011.
- If states had provided the same level of funding per public, full-time equivalent student as in 1990-1991, total appropriations in 2009-2010 would have equaled approximately $102 billion, an amount 35.3 percent higher.
But Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) has
"little tolerance" for people with a lot of student loan debt, "because there's no reason for that." No reason except tuition doubling while wages stagnate. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) thinks students should just
work three jobs to pay for college, and he's putting his budget where his mouth is, proposing cuts that would cause
a million students to lose Pell Grants. During his time atop the Republican presidential primary polling, Herman Cain
advocated getting rid of all federal student aid. Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) thinks the only reason President Obama would want to forgive student loans is to
buy off voters, not address a national crisis.
This is the Republican version of "personal responsibility": If you don't start out rich, you'll just have to live the misery Republican policies inflict on you, and take the blame too.