America's colleges face hidden financial fragility

Hundreds of U.S. colleges and universities are under severe financial strain, despite public focus on elite institutions. A national survey reveals that perceptions of higher education are skewed toward liberal bias and activism, overlooking prosaic challenges like rising costs and declining enrollment. This distortion obscures the sector's underlying vulnerabilities.

Public attention on higher education often centers on elite universities, but the reality for most institutions is far more precarious. A survey of over 30,000 respondents highlighted liberal bias, antisemitism, and political activism as top associations with universities, as one commentator noted: “graduates of a small cadre of elite universities disproportionately populate America’s leadership class and key institutions.” Another observed: “less than 1% of U.S. college students have attended an Ivy League university, yet these schools dominate employers, media and parents’ wishes. But why do we never hear of the other 99%?”

There are 2,661 public and private four-year colleges in the United States, excluding trade schools and nearly 1,500 community colleges. Since 2020, roughly 80 such institutions have closed, while hundreds more grapple with financial stress. Three major credit agencies have issued negative outlooks for the sector in 2026, pointing to declining enrollment, limits on federal loans, and barriers for international students.

The Composite Financial Index (CFI), developed by KPMG, measures health through operating performance, reserves, asset returns, and viability. Scores below 1.0 indicate stress, akin to living paycheck to paycheck. Aggregated data from reports, audits, and trends show hundreds of schools, some with tens of thousands of students, falling below this threshold. These tuition-dependent institutions often cut programs, lay off staff, defer maintenance, and hike prices to survive, lacking endowments and facing high debt.

Students bear the brunt: larger classes, fewer courses, reduced support services, and aging facilities. With $1.8 trillion in student debt and Bureau of Labor Statistics projections of 19 million annual job openings needing college degrees through 2033, questions arise about value. Gallup polls indicate confidence in higher education has dropped 40 percentage points since 2010.

Four shifts explain this: community colleges' rise, now 32–35% of enrollment and offering bachelor's in 150+ across 24 states; state budgets flipping from 6% to 3% for higher education by 2025 amid Medicaid's growth; a 15% projected drop in college-aged students by 2037, with enrollment falling from 21 million in 2010 to 19 million; and online learning's boom, with 10–11 million taking courses and 5 million fully online, growing at 14% annually through 2032.

This has bifurcated the system: cost-focused versus prestige-driven paths, leaving many in between fragile.

Verwandte Artikel

University leaders rejecting Trump administration's higher education compact proposal amid pushback and protests on campus.
Bild generiert von KI

Trump administration higher education compact meets pushback from leading universities

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI Fakten geprüft

The Trump administration has proposed a "Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education" that offers preferential access to federal resources for universities that adopt a series of policy changes. Most of the nine institutions initially approached have publicly declined, with some faculty and lawmakers calling the plan “extortion,” even as public confidence in higher education continues to wane.

Der Rechnungshof von Kolumbien enthüllte in seinem Bericht „Finanzielle Nachhaltigkeit kolumbianischer öffentlicher Universitäten 2019-2024“, dass nur eine der 34 öffentlichen Universitäten des Landes finanzielle Autarkie erreicht. Die Studie hebt eine hohe Konzentration von Ressourcen in vier Hauptinstitutionen hervor, die regionale Ungleichheiten verschärft. Zudem beläuft sich die Pensionsverbindlichkeit des Systems 2024 auf 10,3 Billionen Pesos.

Von KI berichtet

Mexikos öffentliche Universitäten beginnen 2026 mit einer bloßen Budgeterhöhung um 2 % gegenüber 2025, unzureichend, um Inflation und ein Defizit von 50.400 Millionen Pesos auszugleichen. Der Nationale Verband der Universitäten und Hochschulinstitutionen (ANUIES) warnt, dass dies finanzielle Ungleichgewichte verschärfen und zu einer 'Reprivatisierung' der Hochschulbildung führen könnte. Wichtige Einrichtungen wie UNAM und IPN erhalten spezifische Zuwendungen, aber das Wachstum der Studentenzahlen wird nicht durch Finanzierung abgebildet.

Recent National Assessment of Educational Progress results show American students continuing to post some of their lowest reading and math scores in decades. In an interview with The Daily Wire’s Morning Wire podcast, Nicole Nealy, president of Parents Defending Education, argued that diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, including ethnic studies programs and teacher trainings, are diverting time and resources from core academics.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

A new tiered federal excise tax on investment income from large private university endowments—enacted in President Donald Trump’s 2025 “One Big Beautiful Bill” and taking effect for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2025—is prompting hiring freezes, program cutbacks and renewed debate over whether the policy is aimed at revenue or at reshaping higher education.

Der äthiopische Bildungssektor steht vor schweren Finanzierungsherausforderungen aufgrund von Inflation und rückläufiger ausländischer Hilfe. Ein vorgeschlagener Treuhandfonds soll diese Lücken durch Beiträge von Unternehmen und Pensionsfonds schließen. Er zielt darauf ab, den Zugang und die Infrastruktur zu verbessern, insbesondere in benachteiligten Gebieten.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

A new POLITICO poll highlights intense financial pressures on Americans, with nearly half saying it is hard to afford essentials such as groceries, housing and health care. The survey, conducted in November, points to broad impacts on daily life, including people skipping medical care and cutting back on leisure spending, even as many voters remain skeptical of President Donald Trump’s claims that prices are falling.

 

 

 

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen