University Budget Cuts Were Overdue
Several large public universities are getting multimillion dollar budget cuts.

The bursting of the higher education bubble has finally struck its first blow, and it is a serious one. Several major public universities have announced multimillion dollar budget cuts in January, citing enrollment declines among other factors. Pennsylvania State University expects to cut $94 million from its budget starting in July 2025. The University of Connecticut (UConn) announced significant budget cuts in response to its projected $70 million deficit. And the University of New Hampshire (UNH) will slash expenses by $14 million.
These cuts were a long time coming—higher education is facing an enrollment cliff, even as it continues to spend on administration and student services like there's no tomorrow. Pandemic-era emergency funding could only hold off the reckoning for so long. As university administrators rush to blame their state governments for providing insufficient funds, state legislators should remain staunch in enforcing fiscal discipline on universities. There's still a long way to go to make higher education cost-effective.
Though university administrators and faculty consider these budget cuts to be nothing short of catastrophic for university operations, some of the cuts appear quite reasonable. For instance, Penn State plans to scale back branch campus operations and cut duplicate programs. This is a necessary step in the right direction—Pennsylvania is known as the "state with too many campuses," and steep enrollment declines at branch campuses justify reducing their operations.
But even when making the right decisions, universities are too trepidatious. UNH, for example, will cut certain programs at its Aulbani J. Beauregard Center for Equity, Justice, and Freedom. Yet they have not indicated whether only staff or the entire department would be cut. This is not nearly far enough: Not only are diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) administrative units like the Beauregard Center unnecessary and expensive, but they are also harmful to the campus environment. DEI initiatives have led universities to monitor what students and faculty say through bias reporting systems and filtered faculty hiring based on race and political views. Budget cuts should not be needed to cut down on these departments—they should never have been created in the first place.
Instead of making further cuts to superfluous administrators, UNH was quick to close its 60-year-old art museum. The museum housed art that faculty regularly incorporated into classes. Some estimate that the art museum operated at just under $1 million annually. The university could have pursued cuts to other departments before going after a key academic institution. Notably, UNH spends more than $1 million on base salaries for DEI staff alone. This estimate is conservative: It excludes benefits, departmental costs, and other roles at the university related to DEI.
UConn's drastic approach also demonstrates the misguided priorities of higher education leadership. They announced 15 percent cuts across the board, to be doled out equally over the next five years among all units including administration. This approach might seem more "fair," but it operates on the faulty assumption that waste is concentrated equally among all parts of the university. We know this is not true: report after report has discussed the issues of administrative bloat and extravagant student services. There's no need to target core educational functions when more low-hanging fruit exists.
These budget cuts have revived the longstanding fights over public subsidies to higher education institutions. Leaders at Penn State and UConn have publicly called out their state legislatures for failing to fund them to their desired amounts. UConn has discussed raising tuition, and Penn State refuses to commit to a tuition freeze even if their funding demands are met. The arguments hark back to debates over state disinvestment in higher education, in which universities claimed that the exorbitant tuition increases over the past several decades had less to do with massive growth in student loan availability and more to do with reductions in state funding.
But the facts simply do not line up with administrators' narrative. In the case of UConn, the reduction in state funding is not so much a funding cut as it is a return to pre-pandemic realities. Starting in 2020, the Connecticut state government used pandemic relief funds to provide emergency support to its public universities. The relief funds are set to run out in 2025, and the state has not agreed to cover the gap. This makes the current situation an inevitability: pandemic-era relief funds were temporary, but UConn has apparently budgeted as if they were permanent.

As for increasing tuition, a National Association of Scholars report found that even as state funding per student decreased by nearly $4,000, public universities increased tuition by almost $14,000 per student. State funding decreases alone do not come close to explaining tuition increases. What does explain the increase in tuition is the rapid increase in university expenditures. This is why implementing budget cuts is crucial.
As higher education mourns, taxpayers should welcome budget cuts. Restoring fiscal discipline, though painful in the moment, is the only way to permanently fix our higher education system.
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Save your money. Learn how to be a plumber or an electrician . Something useful.
Learn to code.
It supported my family for 45 years with just the one income.
Everyone's doing that these days. There's too much competition for it to really be profitable.
And now AI will replace a year of human coding output in 45 minutes.
Ai possibly, language learning machines, no
Cliche' spouting commentarians definitely.
Perhaps for some of the coders, but my code worked.
"He was pretty helpful for this part of the program, don't tell him though, then he will think programmers are useful"
-rf engineer
They could save a lot if they eliminated sociology departments entirely.
Seems like most universities could save a lot of money by getting rid of all the diversity deans they've appointed in recent years. My university used to have one ombudsman to investigate complaints. Now they have 17 DEI deans, one for each college.
DEI will probably be the last thing to go.
Very much this.
The state governments should refuse to provide any funding unless DEI departments and staff are eliminated.
The increase in tuitions is flat stupid. Here’s how it goes so the elite might be able to understand economics. Number one, you don’t have enough money to operate at your desired level. There is a reason for this. Either education is too costly or the college is not producing jobs that make the degree worth anything. The elites want more money so they can maintain their standard of living. The rest of us would cut costs and cut tuition to bring things back in order. As for the 15% cut across the board that is typical education thinking. Everything that they teach is worth the cost. Do you, the reader of my comment, think that Eastern Peruvian Dance is equal to quantum physics? Of course not. Why isn’t there a class action lawsuit vs universities for charging students for these obviously made up courses? I think any jury in America would find the universities guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt (unless the trial was held in Cambridge, MA, home of Harvard). The cost of a college degree has gone up exponentially ever since the federal government stuck their nose into the scene. They, the feds, wanted a college degree for everyone. Their solution, throw money at what they want to achieve. Unintended consequence? The universities just raised tuition and gave themselves a big unmerited raise. They saw how easy this was that they kept doing it. Result is a bloated university payroll and students having a big debt when they graduate. What made it possible for them to graduate? Crip courses like the aforementioned courses like a Eastern Peruvian Dance course. Too many courses of questionable value, is the reason for college graduates not being able to find jobs. The students are too easily led down a path to promised riches and end up being a fry cook with a huge debt. Biden of course wants to forgive these student loans in exchange for votes. That means people that were smart enough to not go to college will end up paying for these graduates so they can fry fries.
Is this situation fixable? Yes, it is, but not as long as Santa Claus is in charge…..
Butt don't you see, SOME professions NEED to be SUPER-highly educated to that they can PROTECT us benighted peons! Think of super-highly edumacated DOCTORS of Expert Medical Doctorology, who protect us from the use of not-properly-authorized DANGEROUS medical implements of mass death and destruction, such ass cheap plastic flutes, AKA, the dreaded, complex and dangerous LUNG FLUTE!!!
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
How much real world demand is there for quantum physicists? I bet most of them can only get jobs as university professors, just like Peruvian dance instructors. You want real world applications, become an engineer.
the answer to tuition cost is to not fund loans federally to any school with an endowment of over a billion dollars. problem solved.
Yep. The scam has come to an end. The business model of charging exorbitant tuitions that students go into heavy debt to pay is not going to work anymore. Depending primarily on tuitions to fund colleges and universities is itself a model coming to an end. The cost of higher education will have to be brought into line with students’ ability to pay and the value of the education received. Degrees in the humanities should have remained a plaything of the wealthy who could afford to pay for them without harming their future prospects. Big changes are coming and many schools will not survive.
Although I agree in theory, it wasn’t that long ago that you could major in sociology or English and still have relevant skills to get a good job. My wife majored in theater and is now in marketing. This was common until the mid-later aughts when political correctness started its turn towards wokism. Humanities degrees haven’t always been toilet paper. It wasn’t until ideology took the curriculum over that those degrees became red flags.
Like military bases, it may prove tough for public universities to close branch campuses. In Penna., the move to consolidate the 800 students at Cheney (State) Univ. with the 18,000 students ten miles away at West Chester(State) Univ. resulted in multi-millions $$$ being spent on new buildings at Cheney - - largely because Cheney is a HBCU. It could have kept its identity at WCU (like the numerous Oxbridge colleges do in England) but noooooo.
I spoke to one of the engineering college deans three years ago. His problem of not enough room turned into the bigger problem of too much capacity.
Gray box said something. Probably not very bright.
An Education with ********* JUSTICE *********** involved is what will make education work.
If you want others to educate you you’ll have to *EARN* that service instead of rushing like gangsters for your gov-guns to go ransack other people’s labors against their will like a criminal.
It’s truly baffling how many times people cannot seem to come to grips with the fact that gov-guns doesn’t make sh*t and STEALING sh*t is not only criminal but the criminals are never going to respect what they STOLD precisely because they didn't have to *EARN* it like an honorable person.
lunatic, spotted.
Anyone confused by program priorities at most universities, under financial pressure or not, probably does not understand their basic mission, as redefined over the past 30 years. True research and liberal or practical education are out. Dogma and social agenda are in. Just like hundreds of years ago, these are mostly religious institutions that exist to support and promote the faith.
Another disaffected clinger who disdains education (at least, dislikes our strongest, mainstream research and teaching institutions, likely preferring the hundreds of low-quality, nonsense-teaching, superstition-drenched, conservative-controlled backwater schools).
Carry on, clingers.
youre an idiot. stop baying at the moon and wearing womens clothes.
+1
It is inner city schools that are failing moron.
You prefer nonsense-teaching schools?
Schools that suppress science to flatter ridiculous superstition?
Schools that flout academic freedom to enforce silly dogma?
In other words, just about every school faux libertarian conservatives get their hands on.
Like Harvard.
ps. That was too easy.
That’s was just copypasta spam. Arty, you’re not only a dumb cunt, you’re completely unoriginal.
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.......
Restoring fiscal discipline, though painful in the moment, is the only way to permanently fix our higher education system.
Well, we'll need to restore academic discipline too. Biology professors that stick to biology; history professors that stick to history; gender studies professors go to the unemployment line (or jail) - instead of trying to replace actual education with the social/cultural dogma of the hour.
Selling interest bearing loans to students who can't earn scholarships is as evil as letting lawyers advertise.
Today in news you could predict from outer space.
The Seattle Times editorial board recommends: Joe Biden for U.S. president | Editorial
And coverage remains as it always has been for corporate news: coverage.
Kamala Harris rallies Democrats, pumps up Biden and warns of Trump
DEI and several other unsustainable departments should be closed but nope the socialist environment wont achieve clarity until an existential fiscal threat is looming. lets hope its the feds no longer guaranteeing student loans.
ok karen
Iowans weren't the ones who came up with the plan, that was California and other blue states.
At least they’re a lot smarter than Californians, New Yorkers, and people from every other hard blue state.
My name is not Mike.
See, not everyone can code - - - - - - - - -