Should Government Subsidize Higher Education?
James L. Payne has taught political science at Yale, Wesleyan, Johns Hopkins, and Texas A&M. He is now an independent scholar living in Sandpoint, Idaho.
When it comes to agricultural subsidies, scholars line up to criticize. They point out that these government funds cause overproduction and waste, that they stifle innovation, and that they are unfair, since lower-income taxpayers are forced to contribute to wealthier individuals. But on the subject of subsidies to academia, scholars are noticeably silent. They are content with government-operated state universities, and seldom say a word against the many Federal programs that directly or indirectly fund colleges, including student loans, construction grants, work-study programs, and research grants.
This silence is unfortunate, since many of the current problems in American higher education trace to its subsidized character, Those who seek to revitalize academic life can’t afford to ignore this issue. It turns out that the arguments against agricultural subsidies apply in equal or greater force to higher education!
Overproduction and waste in higher education take several forms. Because higher education is priced well below cost, many more individuals fill university places than can profit from the training. One result is an oversupply of trained personnel in many fields: Ph.D.’s in English who work as clerk-typists or B.A. graduates in forestry who drive lumber trucks. The waste is also intellectual: many students who sit in the underpriced college classrooms lack the capability and motivation to absorb the material. They are frustrated and unfulfilled, and their resistance drags down the quality of education for the others.
Another form of waste is the pursuit of irrelevance. Insulated from the discipline of the marketplace in their taxpayer-supported fiefdoms, many academics pursue silly scholastic dogmas. For example, Marxism thrives among university teachers. Professors of literature embrace inane fads in interpretation that lead them to wrest the life from the books they teach.
A broader consequence of subsidizing higher education is that of preserving an historical anachronism. The four-year liberal arts college emerged several hundred years ago as an educational form to serve a tiny, New England elite. Had this institution not been nurtured by government, the landscape of higher education would almost certainly have evolved differently.
In a system of voluntary, unsubsidized higher education, the four-year college probably would have been replaced by a myriad of schools and programs, all competing to provide the kind of education that Americans wanted and could benefit from. To a large extent, this education would be oriented toward specific technical skills. At the same time; however, the liberal arts could thrive. Instead of being imprisoned in government-subsidized academic “disciplines,” subjects such as literature, history, politics, and philosophy could be opened to both teachers and students whose motivation would more often be curiosity and concern. With government out of the picture, who knows what kinds of exciting variations and innovations would flourish!
Regulations and Red Tape
In agriculture, another cost of subsidies has been to subject farmers to governmental regulations and red tape. The subsidies in higher education have entailed the same burden. Take, for example, affirmative action, the Federal requirement—let’s not mince words—that colleges must hire less qualified members of governmentally approved social groups, including women, blacks, and Hispanics. The direct result of this Federal regulation, of course, is less competent faculty members. Its indirect effect on the caliber of administrators may be even more harmful. To be a college dean or president these days, you pretty much have to go along with the premise of affirmative action, which is that social goals can be more important than academic standards. Since uncompromising champions of intellectual excellence cannot accept this premise, these stalwarts tend to be excluded from a leadership role in higher education today.
A final argument against government subsidies for higher education concerns their effect on the thinking of academics. When government pays the salaries, and supports the students, and builds the science labs, and funds the summer research trips to Paris, scholars are encouraged not to bite the hand that feeds them. For one thing, administrative controls are at work. The scholar who makes a forthright criticism of a spending program that is at all close to his field will often be reprimanded by his superiors. Thus, physicists are deterred from questioning super-colliders, educational psychologists are deterred from criticizing public education, and so on.
There is an even more insidious control, however. The really telling objections to government spending programs involve universal principles that underlie all programs. The state-subsidized scholar is reluctant to unearth these ideas, for they bring into question his livelihood and that of his colleagues. For example, one criticism of government subsidies is that they involve the use of physical force, since force and the threat of force are the basis of the tax system. A profound analysis of subsidies, then, would have to ask whether the use of force is a moral approach to social problem-solving. A scholar who already has a government paycheck in his hand would rather not face this issue—and is, of course, biased if he does address it.
Thus we see that government subsidies of higher education may involve far worse evils than similar payments to farmers. In agriculture, a subsidy merely distorts production. In higher education, it distorts the thinking of the entire intellectual class on one of the critical issues of our era, the proper role of government in the life of a people.
Ideas On Liberty
Subsidy Leads to Control
It is hardly lack of due process for the government to regulate that which it subsidizes.—United States Supreme Court
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111, p. 131, October 1942










Comment by Colin Campbell on 28 December 2009:
Great article!!!
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Comment by A real academic. on 3 February 2011:
I actually found this article to be entirely pointless.
No other country in the world charges such exorbatant fees for Higher Education tuition than the USA. And no other country in the world has as many students participating within Higher Education. However every other developed western country across Europe and the Southern Hemisphere offers much more in the way of assistance and subsidies to tertiary students than America.
The arguments in place here actually have little relevance to actual economics and are simply just the same tired anti-socialist dogma which conservatives spout in the USA. It is disheartening as perhaps with some real reform a college Education in America could be more of a blessing and less of a burden to graduates. A simple exploration of policies in place in France, Germany, England, Australia, Canada and New Zealand can illustrate the plethora of ways in which the burden of college debt can be lifted from students, not all subsidies come in the form of bulk loans and grants. Of course it would be a backwards world in which America looked to other nations for guidance.
Comment by Beth on 5 June 2011:
A Real Academic (?),
Those very countries you quote as helping their people with college are countries who have lower productivity than we do plus higher unemployment. Saying these countries are what we should emulate is not very good.
There is one question I never have had answered to my satisfaction concerning all this “help” for college and the insistence that everyone needs it. If everyone, or almost everyone got generous help and obtained a nice college education, what would that education be worth? Would not the value of education go down if everyone, or most everyone had it?
Not everyone should be in college and the government giving all this help distorts the market and acutally makes it worse for everyone.
Also, do not not notice that most everytime government increases aid to college students that tuition rises similiarly? This is not a coincidence.
Comment by Anonymous on 29 October 2011:
Regarding: Those very countries you quote as helping their people with college are countries who have lower productivity than we do plus higher unemployment.
Take Norway, for example. University education is completely free for everyone. The unemployment rate is now 3.6% (higher than usual for Norway). There is zero poverty.
Consequently, every citizen who wants to pursue a high-demand career is able to get the required training. In the US, many highly talented and motivated people are not able to pursue their desired career because they cannot afford the training.
Comment by Greg on 25 April 2012:
“affirmative action, the Federal requirement—let’s not mince words—that colleges must hire less qualified members of governmentally approved social groups, including women, blacks, and Hispanics.”
I question the author’s capacity to critically analyze issues of higher education when he claims: 1) there are “governmentally approved social groups,” whatever “approved” means here, and 2)that colleges are required to hire “less qualified” faculty and administrators. There seems to be an inference here that women and ethnic minorities are inherently less qualified. Where is the evidence for this proposition? Is it, perhaps, in your perspective as a privileged and biased white man? Just a guess.