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Showing all 4 results
Fried, Vance H. – Cato Institute, 2011
Undergraduate education is a highly profitable business for nonprofit colleges and universities. They do not show profits on their books, but instead take their profits in the form of spending on some combination of research, graduate education, low-demand majors, low faculty teaching loads, excess compensation, and featherbedding. The industry's…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Undergraduate Study, Educational Finance, Federal Government
Coulson, Andrew J. – Cato Institute, 2008
Would large-scale, free-market reforms improve educational outcomes for American children? That question cannot be answered by looking at domestic evidence alone. Though innumerable "school choice" programs have been implemented around the United States, none has created a truly free and competitive education marketplace. Existing programs are too…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Comparative Education, Global Approach, Evidence
Gryphon, Marie – Cato Institute, 2005
In the wake of the Supreme Court's 2003 decision upholding admissions preferences, affirmative action remains a deeply divisive issue. This tendency to frame the argument over preferences in terms of fundamental values is common to both sides of the debate. Because the nation's history with respect to race is so painful, the resulting argument is…
Descriptors: College Admission, Affirmative Action, Educational Policy, Politics of Education
Wolfram, Gary – Cato Institute, 2005
As Congress debates the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act (HEA), it should heed Friedrich Hayek's warning that democracy is "peculiarly liable, if not guided by accepted common principles, to produce over-all results that nobody wanted." One result of the federal government's student financial aid programs is higher tuition costs at the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Federal Government, Student Financial Aid, Tuition


