Study finds tuition cost increases this year did not keep up with inflation
Colleges have struggled to retain enrollment in the pandemic, so there is pressure to keep tuition increases low

For this school year, the average increase in tuition at public and private colleges did not keep up with inflation. That’s according to a new report out from the College Board.
Usually during a recession, college enrollment goes up, said Columbia education and economics professor Judy Scott-Clayton.
But that’s not happening for schools during the pandemic.
“They’re struggling to attract and retain enrollments right now. And so there’s pressure to keep those tuition increases low,” Scott-Clayton said.
And usually, during a recession, government spending on schools drops. But according to Vanderbilt education professor Will Doyle, that didn’t happen either.
“One of the big reasons for public institutions that the tuition didn’t go up as much as is because the states were able to maintain their support,” he said.
For years though, he said college tuition was growing much faster than inflation.
Jennifer Ma, co-author of that College Board report, points out that students have been borrowing less.
“Overall annual borrowing declined for the 10th consecutive year,” she said.
The report said as of this March more than half of borrowers with outstanding education debt owed less than $20,000.