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Tuition Increases by 2.9% in 2013; Lowest Increase in 30 Years

Tuition Increases by 2.9% in 2013; Lowest Increase in 30 Years
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Concerns about rising tuition and how students can afford to finance their major investments in post-secondary education are widespread. Solid insights into these questions require accurate and up-to-date information about prices. reports on the prices charged by colleges and universities in 2013-14, how prices have changed over time, and how they vary within and across types of institutions, states, and regions. We also provide information on the net prices that students and families actually pay after taking financial aid into consideration. The story is a complicated one, with different students paying different prices at the same institutions, depending on their financial circumstances; on their academic qualifications, athletic ability, or other characteristics; and on their year or program of study.

Trends in College Pricing 2013

The information in this report does not answer all of the questions about the cost of producing education or about the prices students pay, but it does  provide a great deal of information that can inform the discussion. A clear message that emerges from the data is that short-term trends can be misleading. In the past few years, as states, institutions, and families have been struggling with the impact of the Great Recession on their budgets, it has been too easy to project the accompanying trend of increasingly rapid price increases far into the future.

The 2013-14 increase in published tuition and fees at public four-year colleges and universities is the smallest we have seen in many years. This does not mean that college is suddenly more affordable, but it does mean that the rapid growth of recent years did not represent a “new normal” for annual price increases. That said, after large increases in grant aid in 2009‑10 and 2010-11, especially from the federal government, growth in this student assistance has not continued. As a result, many students are facing larger increases in the prices they pay, even in the face of smaller increases in published prices.

Published Tuition and Fee and Room and Board Charges

The 2.9% increase in in-state tuition and fees at public four-year institutions in 2013‑14 followed increases of 4.5% in 2012‑13 and 8.5% in 2011-12 and was the smallest percentage increase in over 30 years.

Variation in Tuition and Fees

Among full-time undergraduates at public and private nonprofit four-year institutions, the median published tuition and fee price in 2013‑14 is $11,093.

Differences across states

What Students Actually Pay

Because of increases in aid, the average net price for full-time in-state public four-year college students was $650 lower (in 2013 dollars) in 2009-10 than it was in 2008‑09. However, between 2009-10 and 2013‑14, average net price increased from $1,940 (in 2013 dollars) to about $3,120.

Institutional Finances

From 2000-01 to 2010-11, the inflation-adjusted ten-year percentage changes in education expenditures per FTE student at public institutions were 3% to 5% increases at four-year institutions and a 11% decrease at two-year colleges.

Enrollment Patterns

Between 2010 and 2011, enrollment grew by 123,000 (2%) in the public four-year sector and by 66,000 (2%) in the private nonprofit four-year sector. Enrollment in public two-year colleges was 159,000 (2%) lower in 2011 than it had been the previous year; it was 68,000 (3%) lower in the for-profit sector.

College Affordability

Average incomes for families in the middle quintile and above increased between 2011 and 2012, but real incomes remained lower (after adjusting for inflation) at all levels of the income distribution than they had been in 2002.

This content was originally posted on CollegeBoard.org and can be viewed here: Trends in College Pricing

Photo Credit: Jannis Tobias Werner / Shutterstock.com

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