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Are US universities driving inequality?

Once lauded as engines of social mobility, American universities are increasingly perceived as widening social and economic injustices. Matthew Reisz speaks to two academics whose new book lays bare the extent of the problem and the potential solutions

Published on
June 23, 2022
Last updated
July 25, 2022
Source: Cemile Bingol/Getty montage

There is an 鈥渋nescapable irony鈥 about higher education in the United States, reflects Michael McPherson.

鈥淢ost of the energy at the more selective institutions goes into picking out students who have demonstrated they will find it very easy to learn 鈥 the easiest possible people to teach,鈥 explains the American economist and former liberal arts college president. Meanwhile, the 鈥渉ardest people to teach are those who really struggle to get through high school鈥, which means that the 鈥渆asier you are to teach, the more resources are directed at聽you鈥, he聽adds.

The multiple ways in which such perverse priorities reinforce inequality in US higher education and beyond are explored extensively in McPherson and Sandy Baum鈥檚 new book, (Princeton University Press).

The analysis arrives at a timely moment. Many no longer see US universities as the great social levellers they once were; in some eyes, the meritocratic institutions that gave unprecedented opportunities to GIs, women and the working class to rise above the circumstances into which they were born are gone. Instead, entrenched elitism 鈥 personified by the cash-for-places scandals in many high-profile institutions 鈥 means that universities are often seen to enforce, rather than curb, inequality. Cost matters, too: politicians are giving serious thought to cancelling the US鈥 near-$2聽trillion student debt mountain, amid fears that a college education has become too much of a financial burden. Despite some noble efforts, elite universities are under pressure to show that they are more than finishing schools for the affluent.

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McPherson鈥檚 background 鈥 his parents grew up in the Great Depression and did not even attend high school 鈥 adds urgency to his analysis. He took three degrees at the University of Chicago and eventually served as president of Macalester College, in Minnesota, and then the in Chicago, which carries out research on educational improvement. Baum鈥檚 upbringing was different: she is the daughter of a college president whose parents both had graduate degrees. She herself attended Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania and then Columbia University. But the two non-resident senior fellows at the Urban Institute 鈥 a Washington-based thinktank that produces 鈥渆conomic and social policy research鈥 鈥 agree that universities should be part of the solution, not the problem.

The challenges are enhanced by the tendency of educational research to view higher education and school-age learning as entirely distinct, both believe. At the Spencer Foundation, for instance, McPherson discovered 鈥渢wo completely different groups of researchers鈥, one devoted to higher education and the other looking at 鈥淜-12 education鈥, all the way from kindergarten to the end of high school, as well as 鈥渃hildren鈥檚 emotional and social development鈥.

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鈥淭hat seems fundamentally unhealthy,鈥 he says now. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to take a life cycle perspective.鈥

It is well known that the US is a very unequal society, but the array of statistics gathered by Baum and McPherson truly hammers home the point. For instance, the average income of the top 20聽per cent of American households is 8.4聽times that of the lowest 20聽per cent, compared with聽6.5 for the UK, 5.4 for the OECD as a whole and 4.6 for France and Germany.

Inequality also pervades every level of the education system. Seventy-three per cent of the young children of parents with a graduate or professional degree were attending preschool or kindergarten in 2018, compared with 57聽per cent of those whose parents did not attend or complete high school. At the other end of the K-12 scale, 83聽per cent of students graduating from high school in high-income families went straight on to college, but only 67聽per cent of those from low-income families did.

Perhaps even more significantly, parental education level correlates strongly with the kinds of institutions their children attended. Only 31聽per cent of those whose parents鈥 education stopped at high school were attending four-year courses at public or private non-profit institutions in 2018. For those where parents have bachelor鈥檚 degrees, the comparable figure was 64聽per cent, rising to 83聽per cent in the case of those whose parents have doctoral or professional degrees.

So how large a role do universities play in maintaining, and perhaps increasing, inequality?

In recent years, we have seen a lot of attention paid to the role of higher education in 鈥渃reating, exacerbating and perpetuating inequality鈥, responds Baum. The assumption, she explains, is that 鈥渋f only the elite, highly selective colleges and universities would enrol and graduate more low-income students, we could reduce inequality鈥. Hence pundits and even congressional hearings, she points out, keep returning to the question: 鈥淲hy is Harvard not lowering its tuition or taking more low-income students?鈥

For Baum and McPherson, the phenomenon of 鈥渦ndermatching鈥 鈥 when talented school-leavers from low-income backgrounds don鈥檛 go to the most selective institutions that would accept them but to less demanding local universities and colleges 鈥 is indeed a crucial issue that needs to be addressed. The more selective the institution attended by such students, the higher their chances of completing their degrees and the better their life prospects. And generous 鈥渘eeds-based aid鈥 at the richest, elite universities often makes them the cheapest option for poorer students.

So why is undermatching so prevalent? Poor counselling in schools, a lack of information about financial aid packages and families that don鈥檛 understand the differences between institutions are among the answers identified. Concerns that low-income students would not feel welcome or comfortable in certain colleges also need to be tackled head-on, Baum and McPherson add.

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Although the last issue is partly a question of perception, McPherson contends that this perception reflects reality. Speaking as a former college president, he notes that 鈥渋t鈥檚 really important 鈥 and difficult 鈥 to create a genuinely welcoming environment because you have to have the imagination to see how strange a college like Macalester looks to someone who grew up in North Minneapolis. They don鈥檛 know about residential life and may not have met a college graduate except their teacher. We fail all the time to anticipate what a challenge it is to make that move.鈥

When he spent a couple of weeks at the University of California, Berkeley, recalls McPherson, he kept getting lost because 鈥淏erkeley鈥檚 signage was miserable. For me, it was an annoyance. But if you come from [a聽poor neighbourhood] and can鈥檛 find the places you are meant to go, the overwhelming message is: obviously you don鈥檛 belong here鈥t bothers me immensely if we recruit and throw money at low-income students with high test scores and then we don鈥檛 recognise that they need a great deal of support to feel that they are fully members of the community.鈥

Except perhaps at the very richest institutions, finances are also a core issue.

鈥淭here are trade-offs,鈥 explains Baum. 鈥淚f you spend a lot more money on financial aid and take in less tuition revenue, you have less to pay faculty, to renovate buildings and to do all the other things which actually contribute to the educational experience.鈥 This approach risks alienating the more affluent students, not least because the levels of cross-subsidy can feel unfair to those paying full fees. In some cases, Baum continues, 鈥渋nstitutions which have really made an effort to increase low-income enrolment have decided to pull back when a new president comes in because of concerns about revenues and competition. It鈥檚 a fine line to walk.鈥

More generous federal support is ideally required, in Baum鈥檚 view: 鈥淲e need to ensure low-income students have enough public funding for them to go to the best place they can get into鈥 鈥 something she sees as having no 鈥渋mportant social downside鈥.

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The result is often life-changing for low-income students but has little negative impact on the more privileged students they 鈥渞eplace鈥 since the latter have a great deal of cultural capital to fall back on, she says. Highly selective universities could adjust their admissions criteria for low-income students in the same ways that many regularly do for the children of alumni 鈥 never mind for potential athletics stars.

The focus on access to elite institutions is, however, only a small part of the story, McPherson and Baum argue. If higher education is to play its full role in addressing inequality, claims McPherson, society must focus less on 鈥渕oving students from community colleges to Princeton鈥, which will benefit only a few individuals. Instead, states should seek to make community colleges and similar institutions more effective in retaining students and giving them the qualifications they need.

As Baum puts it, we need to see 鈥渢he per-student funding gap鈥 between institutions reduced, given that 鈥渟tates tend to dramatically underfund community colleges and regional public universities鈥. McPherson believes there is evidence that 鈥渟imply spending more money on community colleges, even if it is not well directed, tends to improve completion rates鈥, suggesting that 鈥渢he places are really starved and don鈥檛 need sophisticated strategies to do better鈥. Nonetheless, he would also like to see such colleges clarifying their missions and giving students more detailed guidance about the paths that are right for them.

Proposals to get more low-income students into selective institutions and to reduce dropout rates at community colleges may sound relatively modest, but Baum and McPherson are wary about many of the more ambitious 鈥渂lockbuster answers鈥 that would supposedly transform higher education.

Person on flying degree certificate
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
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Proposals such as Bernie Sanders鈥 鈥渇ree college鈥 policies to 鈥 now gaining traction in Washington 鈥 tend to benefit the rich more than the poor and, as Baum points out, would do nothing to improve institutions that are currently 鈥済iving people something which is not valuable鈥. also focuses on graduates rather than current or future students. However, 鈥渋f you want to create new educational opportunities, paying backwards for the people who have already gone to college isn鈥檛 going to help,鈥 Baum notes.

As for the hype around digital solutions, McPherson takes the view that 鈥測ou can have cheap online education or good online education, but you can鈥檛 have both鈥. Since cheap options 鈥渆ssentially demand that students teach themselves鈥, they tend to 鈥渨ork best for those with good bachelor鈥檚 degrees, who know how to learn on their own鈥, he says. 鈥淗igh-quality digital education requires a lot of support, good materials and a decent level of human contact.鈥

As this last point suggests, what happens within higher education is decisively influenced by students鈥 preparedness for college as they emerge from high school. And this is shaped not only by the very variable quality of schooling but also by factors such as poverty, housing, neighbourhoods and healthcare, where the US tends to be much more unequal than most other Western countries.

Can College Level the Playing Field? makes a forceful case that 鈥渉igher education will not come close to equalising outcomes for young people from different backgrounds until satisfactory early life conditions are more nearly universal鈥. Data show that the US devotes a smaller proportion of post-secondary education spending to the pre-college years than many other countries do. 鈥淐ompensating at later ages for the effects of early inequalities in children鈥檚 treatment and opportunity is more expensive, less effective, and more limited in reach than preventing the inequalities in the first place,鈥 the authors argue. 鈥淟arge and effective investment in early education鈥 is not only more cost-effective but also tends to boost the efficacy of any additional 鈥渓ate adolescent investments鈥, including 鈥渟ubsidised college tuition鈥.

This has two important implications. If we are serious about reducing inequality, Baum argues, 鈥渇ocusing on higher education as a scapegoat isn鈥檛 going to get us very far鈥. Perhaps surprisingly for someone so steeped in higher education, she would like to see 鈥渁dvocates for higher education opportunity鈥 focus less on how much is spent specifically on higher education and instead 鈥渢o have early childhood at the top of their agenda. If聽I聽had to pick between extending federal grants to college students or making sure families have access to childcare, I鈥檇 go for the childcare. Otherwise, the programmes won鈥檛 do any good because children won鈥檛 be ready to benefit.鈥

Although she doesn鈥檛 go as far as saying that higher education gets too large a share of the spending pie, Baum concedes that 鈥渋t probably gets too much attention鈥 and believes that people working in the sector 鈥渉ave a responsibility to direct attention to other areas and to put some of their weight behind them鈥.

If income inequality in the US is profoundly shaped by what happens before college, we also need to look at what happens afterwards, Baum and McPherson argue. One factor is the exceptionally large earnings premium (by both historical and international standards) people gain from a college degree in the US today, which translates into inequality of opportunity in the next generation. This can be reduced through raising the minimum wage or making tax systems more progressive, policy decisions over which universities have limited influence, but also by increasing the supply of graduates so that they have less scarcity value. (This happened briefly in the 1960s and early 1970s.)

Here we confront some fundamental issues for universities and their students. Although few people would go to college if there were no long-term financial advantages, what are the implications of reducing the graduate premium?

Baum would like universities to think more deeply about 鈥渨hat kinds of people they are creating and nurturing鈥. Is the aim to 鈥渆nable them to make as much money as possible or to develop values which would help them contribute more to society by addressing social justice or reducing inequality鈥?

鈥淚f you go back 20 or 30 years and look at studies of what students hoped to get out of college,鈥 says McPherson, 鈥渢he predominant response used to be 鈥榯o gain an improved philosophy of life鈥, but now, by far, the predominant response is 鈥榯o make more money鈥欌.

This is partly because 鈥渃olleges have marketed themselves as money-making machines at the expense of the other good reasons for going to college鈥, he聽adds.

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Baum and McPherson make a compelling case that US universities and colleges must do more to address inequality, but also that such institutions are far from the only barriers to creating a fairer society; any efforts they make to widen participation need to be supported by much wider policy interventions, from early years education and affordable childcare to progressive tax policies. Nonetheless, it is equally clear that many higher education institutions urgently need to reflect on the extent to which, as things stand, they are part not so much of the solution as of the problem.

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Reader's comments (2)

I see absolutely nothing new in any of this except one term of jargon "under matching." What is the reviewer fussing over? McPherson isn't a scholar....
"The Tyranny of Merit" by Michael J. Sandel

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