OCTOBER 2004 |
||
|
Higher-Education Support Helps Ensure Stronger Communities,
Nation Investment in higher education provides significant dividends for graduates who reap the many social and financial rewards that a degree offers. But a new report shows that financial support for postsecondary education also pays off in ways that reach far beyond individual achievement to affect all of society. Entire communities and the nation as a whole benefit from greater higher-education access — thanks to higher tax revenues, less unemployment, greater productivity, reduced reliance on public assistance, increased consumption, greater civic participation, less crime, and better quality of health, civic life and social cohesion. The recent report “Investing in America’s Future: Why Student Aid Pays Off for Society and Individuals” shows, for example, that the unemployment rate for those with bachelor’s degrees was 2.9 percent in January 2004, compared with 4.9 percent for those with high-school diplomas and 8.8 percent for those with less than a high-school diploma. In the 2000 national elections, 77 percent of Americans with bachelor’s degrees voted, compared with 54 percent of high-school graduates and 38 percent of those with less than a high-school diploma. Despite higher education’s compelling public benefits, access to college is at risk for many families. Thirty years of relative declines in grant aid based on students’ financial need and decreasing state funding for colleges and universities have dramatically shifted the burden of rising college costs to students and their families. Low-income families, in particular, are bearing the brunt of this shift. Need-based-grant aid now represents 22 percent of federal student aid, down dramatically from 61 percent three decades ago. The purchasing power of the Pell grant, the largest federal grant for higher education, has declined significantly. As a result, the gap in college-going rates between low-income and high-income students has remained virtually unchanged during the past 20 years. Without an increase in financial support, this gap likely will widen. Stemming the higher-education-access crisis will require the efforts of both the public and private sectors. By taking the following three steps, you can play a role in making higher education a reality for all qualified students:
The broad impact that postsecondary education has on graduates and the communities in which they live should make investment in higher education a priority. The financial and social future of our nation demands a renewed commitment to making college affordable for all. USA Funds sponsored the report “Investing in America’s
Future” in
observance of National Scholarship Month. The report is available for downloading
from USA Funds’ Web site, www.usafunds.org.
|
||
|
PREVIOUS PAGE ~ TABLE OF CONTENTS ~ NEXT PAGE |
||