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Evangelauf, Jean – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
Early announcements show many colleges are raising tuition 5 to 11 percent, squeezed by pressures to keep costs down and spend more to improve educational quality. A federal investigation of possible tuition price-fixing at 56 institutions has also increased anxiety among administrators. (MSE)
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Financial Problems, Higher Education, Inflation (Economics)
Halstead, D. Kent – 1983
Specialized price indexes and supporting price data for elementary, secondary, and higher education institutions are presented. The indexes can be used to deflate revenues and expenditures to obtain dollars of constant purchasing power. The School Price Index (SPI), a new index for fiscal years 1975-1982, prices the goods and services purchased by…
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Economic Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Expenditures
Evangelauf, Jean – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1989
Many colleges are announcing tuition rises of 7 percent to 10 percent, with costs continuing to rise. While the public has accepted tuition increases so far, there is concern that private institutions will price themselves out of the market. Several universities are beginning a new pricing policy favoring returning students. (MSE)
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Economic Change, Higher Education, Inflation (Economics)
Henderson, Cathy – 1983
Recent trends in college costs and reasons why college costs have been increasing are considered. Comparative data are presented on recent rates of growth among average college charges, faculty salaries, the Higher Education Price Index (HEPI), and the Consumer Price Index (CPI). It is shown that from 1977 through 1982, average total tuition,…
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Economic Climate, Educational Finance, Fees
Joyner, Carlotta C. – 1996
This report discusses the increase in college tuition and related fees at 4-year public colleges and universities from school year 1980-81 through 1994-95 and schools' expenditures over the same period. The report also discusses variations in tuition charges among states, factors contributing to increased school expenditures, and initiatives…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Cost Indexes, Educational Finance, Expenditures
Armstrong, David F. – 1979
The increase in tuition and expenditures at Montgomery College were analyzed through the use of the Higher Education Price Index (HEPI) based upon 1967 dollars. This index gives an indication of the effect of inflation upon a given amount of goods and services. Application of the HEPI to Montgomery College data since 1967 reveals that tuition for…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Cost Indexes, Costs, Economic Factors
Eglin, Joseph J., Jr.; And Others – 1996
This report presents statistical data on trends in tuition costs from 1980-81 through 1995-96. The average tuition for in-state undergraduate students of 4-year public colleges and universities for academic year 1995-96 was approximately 8.9 percent of median household income. This figure was obtained by dividing the students' average annual…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Cost Indexes, Educational Finance, Expenditures
Campbell, William E.; Dogoloff, Sylvan A. – 1979
Though the budget of the Community College of Baltimore (CCB) increased 488% from 1967 to 1979, CCB expenditures and tuition rates show a marked decline when adjusted for inflation through the use of the Higher Education Price Index. While CCB expenditures per full-time equivalent (FTE) student rose from $1,080 in 1967 to a projected $1,896 in…
Descriptors: Administrators, Community Colleges, Cost Indexes, Educational Finance
Henderson, Cathy – 1986
Major factors causing tuition and other charges to rise faster than inflation are analyzed. Attention is directed to the effect of inflation on faculty salaries, federal need-based aid to private colleges, expenditures for capital equipment by state colleges, and state appropriations to higher education. Data are provided on average undergraduate…
Descriptors: Capital Outlay (for Fixed Assets), Cost Indexes, Economic Factors, Fees
Halstead, D. Kent; Hickson, Lenel – 1978
The 1978 supplement to the basic study, Higher Education Prices and Price Indexes, presents higher education price index data for fiscal years 1971 through 1978. A price index series measures the effects of price change, and price change only, on a fixed group of items. The indexes reported here measure price changes from 1967, the reference date.…
Descriptors: Capital Outlay (for Fixed Assets), Construction Costs, Cost Indexes, Economic Change
American Association of State Colleges and Universities, Washington, DC. – 1980
In 1980, full-time state resident undergraduate students attending AASCU-member institutions paid an average of $712 for tuition and fees, and $1,605 for room and board charges. These figures reflect a 10.6 percent average increase over 1979 costs. Including books and supplies, transportation, and personal expenses, the cost of college attendance…
Descriptors: College Housing, Comparative Analysis, Cost Indexes, Fees