National Center for Higher Education Management Systems 3035 Center Green Drive, Suite 150 Boulder, Colorado 80301 Higher Expectations and Fewer Resources:

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Presentation transcript:

National Center for Higher Education Management Systems 3035 Center Green Drive, Suite 150 Boulder, Colorado Higher Expectations and Fewer Resources: What’s a SHEEO to Do? Dennis P. Jones SHEEO Annual Meeting Santa Fe, NM July 17, 2009

The Expectation “By 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world” President Barack Obama, February 24, 2009 slide 2

slide 3 Current Annual Degree Production – 2,252,212 Additional Annual Degree Production Needed – 150,528 per Year Associate and Bachelors Degrees Needed to Become the Most Educated Country by 2020 Increase in State and Local Funding at Current Cost per FTE Note: Assumes private institutions will maintain current share

The “Gap” - Difference in Annual Degrees Currently Produced and Annual Degrees Needed to Meet Benchmark Source:U.S. Census Bureau, PUMS and Population Projections, IPEDS Completions Survey Accounting for Migration U.S. = 781,301 (a 52.8% increase in the public sector) 131,749 94, ,533 North Dakota Nebraska Iowa Rhode Island Utah New York Colorado Massachusetts slide 4

THE FISCAL REALITIES slide 5

Expenditures on Tertiary Educational Institutions as a Percentage of GDP, by Source of Fund (2004) *Some levels of education are included with others **Including public subsidies to households attributable for educational institutions, as well as including direct expenditure on educational institutions from international sources. ***Net of public subsidies attributable for educational institutions. Source: OECD.

Expenditures slide 7 Annual % Budget Increase, Fiscal 1979 to Fiscal 2009 *32-year historical average rate of growth is 5.9 percent **Fiscal 09 numbers are estimated ***Fiscal 10 numbers are recommended Source: NASBO June 2009 Fiscal Survey of States

Combined Budget Gaps of $230B slide 8 *Only 24 states have forecasted FY 2011 budget gaps to date 37 states 24 states

For most states – and for most public institutions – the stimulus package is not an answer. But it could slow the impact And it could buy enough time to adjust to substantially changed circumstances slide 9

After stimulus wanes, gaps could approximate 4% of spending, or $70 billion, even under the “Low-Gap” Scenario Source: Don Boyd (Rockefeller Institute of Government), 2009 slide 10

After stimulus wanes, gaps could approach 7% of spending or $120 billion under the “High-Gap” scenario Source: Don Boyd (Rockefeller Institute of Government), 2009 slide 11

Projected State and Local Budget Surplus (Gap) as a Percent of Revenues, 2016 slide 12 Source: NCHEMS; Don Boyd (Rockefeller Institute of Government), 2009

State Tax Capacity and Effort—Indexed to U.S. Average Source: State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DE GA HI IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MS MT NE NV NJ NY NC ND OH OK PA RI SC SD UT VT VA WA FL ID MI MN MO NH NM TN TX WV WI WY State Tax Capacity (Total Taxable Resources Per Capita) State Tax Effort (Effective Tax Rate) US OR Slide 13

THE DEMOGRAPHIC REALITIES slide 14

The big population growth will be in students of color. In the main these will be individuals of modest means. Therefore there are real limits as to how high tuition can go before price affects participation and completion. slide 15

Change in Population Age By Race/Ethnicity, Source: U.S. Census Bureau slide 16 …2,689,700 …1,044,516

Difference Between Whites and Next Largest Race/Ethnic Group in Percentage of Adults Age with an Associate Degree or Higher, 2000 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, PUMS (based on 2000 Census)

Family Incomes of Families with School Age Children slide 18 Source: American Community Survey

Expectations Maintain access – serve an increasing number of students Maintain affordability to both students and the state slide 19 Invest stimulus funds in: Developing more cost-effective ways of doing business Paying for the transition

Short-Term Actions Reallocate faculty time to undergraduate courses and away from –Administrative and committee work and other activities for which release time is granted –Undersubscribed graduate programs that cannot be justified by regional labor market needs –Non-sponsored research Collaborate with other institutions – share –Academic programs –Administrative services Make sure that students are receiving all aid for which they’re eligible slide 20

Longer Term Strategies – Mission Focus Refocus on the institutional mission – serving state and student needs rather than institutional aspirations –Eliminate small, non-core programs – close low-demand, high- cost programs that aren’t distinguished and can’t be justified by labor market needs –Re-think institutional aid – focus on removing barriers to attendance rather than competing for students whose college participation is not in question slide 21

Longer Term Strategies Make investments in more efficient administration and plant operations –Retrofit building for energy efficiency –Reengineer business processes –Renegotiate relationships with the state (invest in a Policy Audit with an eye toward restructuring state administrative and reporting requirements) slide 22

Longer Term Strategies Invest in reengineering curricula and delivery methods –Restructure general education Fewer options More large enrollment courses More courses that can be taught by faculty from multiple disciplines –Invest in course redesign –Tackle developmental education on a statewide basis Common standards Modularized Technology enhanced slide 23