College (as we know it) is broken.

The system of higher education in the United States is being rebuilt from the foundation and we’ve only just started to see the impact of this dramatic transformation.

But before we talk about all of the changes that are happening in higher education right now, let’s talk about why college is, to put it simply, broken in the United States.

College is Broken.

It’s impossible to miss the many ways college is broken today. And I’m not just talking about the high profile bribery scandal that broke several weeks ago.

While parents paying hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars to guarantee college admission through a “side door” is concerning, it pales in comparison to these other indicators of college broken-ness.

1. Student Loans Are Crippling Tens of Millions

44.2 Million Americans currently are carrying close to $1.5 Trillion in student loan debt (this is ~20% of the US adult population).

Even more astonishing, over 11% of these loans are delinquent (90+ days without payment or in default).

This delinquency rate is >5x the credit card delinquency rate!

Student loans have become such a burden that companies have been started to offer student loan repayment as a fringe benefit: Goodly.

Shout out to Goodly for helping the many already in debt, but we need to stop the problem at the source too!

Sources: Federal Reserve, Bloomberg

2. Tuition Increases Are Relentless

From 1988 to 2008, tuition increased on average by 3.5% per year. From 2008 to 2018, tuition continued to increase at a still-suffocating 3% per year.

In 1998, tuition at a private 4-year college was 77% of the average male income in the United States.

By 2016, this had increased to 116%.

On the public college side, the increase is even more dramatic. In 1998, the costs averaged 29% of the average male income in the United States, increasing to 52% in 2016.

Incomes simply have not kept pace with tuition increases.

Source: ProCon.org

Average Rates of Growth of Published Charges by Decade - Trends in Higher Education - The College Board

3. Incentives Are Distorted Between Colleges and Students

Students continue to attend college and continue to take on these significant loans because they believe they are making a good investment. College graduates earn substantially more than High School graduates over the course of their career, right? Correct, but…

The fundamental problem is that if the college they attend turns out to be a bad investment, as a growing number of private 4-year colleges do, only the student pays this penalty (and they pay a BIG, often lifelong, one).

The college already got paid by either the government or the student loan company and there is simply no penalty for their lack of performance in student education and career placement (save for some very limited publicly funded university penalties).

There are also no meaningful incentives from the government to provide education in areas where jobs are in the highest demand.

The only true incentive these colleges have is one that is too distant for many: The ability to continue to recruit new students who will pay their ever-increasing tuition rates.

How College is Changing Right Now

Where And How You Learn

How You Pay

Cultural Changes and Pressures

Thank you for reading. If you’re enjoying this post so far, I think you would enjoy my new book, Disrupt Yourself. For a limited time, I’m offering a free pre-release chapter.

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Prediction: College in 10 Years…

Prediction: College in 20 Years…

College is Changing and It’s a Good Thing

College is broken today.

But fortunately, many startups, companies, and public figures are starting to pay attention and build the next generation of higher education.

It’s going to be disruptive, it’s going to be scary (at times), but with the right minds focused on this huge problem, our country will build a secondary education system that has:

How do you think college will change in the next 10–20 years? Let me know on Twitter or in the comments: @amitch5903

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