Approaching a Tipping Point? A History and Prospectus of Funding for the University of California

J. Douglass, Zachary Bleemer
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

This year marks the University of California’s (UC) 150th anniversary. In part to reflect on that history, and to provide a basis to peer into the future, the following report provides a history of the University of California’s revenue sources and expenditures. The purpose is to provide the University’s academic community, state policymakers, and Californians with a greater understanding of the University’s financial history, focusing in particular on the essential role of public funding. In its first four decades, UC depended largely on income generated by federal land grants and private philanthropy, and marginally on funding from the state. The year 1911 marked a major turning point: henceforth, state funding was linked to student enrollment workload. As a result, the University grew with California’s population in enrollment, academic programs, and new campuses. This historic commitment to systematically fund UC, the state’s sole land-grant university, helped create what is now considered the world’s premier public university system. However, beginning with cutbacks in the early 1990s UC’s state funding per student steadily declined. The pattern of state disinvestment increased markedly with the onset of the Great Recession. As chronicled in this report, the University diversified its sources of income and attempted to cut costs in response to this precipitous decline, while continuing to enroll more and more Californians. Even with the remarkable improvement in California’s economy, state funding per student remains significantly below what it was only a decade ago. Peering into the future, this study also provides a historically informed prospectus on the budget options available to UC. Individual campuses, such as Berkeley and UCLA, may be able to generate other income sources to maintain their quality and reputation. But there is no clear funding model or pathway for the system to grow with the needs of the people of California. UC may be approaching a tipping point in which it will need to decide whether to continue to grow in enrollment without adequate funding, or limit enrollment and program growth to focus on quality and productivity. Funding support was provided by the Center for Studies in Higher Education of the Goldman School of Public Policy, Speaker Emeritus John A. Perez, and UC Berkeley Deans Henry E. Brady and Bob Jacobsen. The views expressed are those of the authors.
接近引爆点?加州大学的历史和资助说明书
今年是加州大学建校150周年。为了反思这段历史,并为展望未来提供基础,以下报告提供了加州大学收入来源和支出的历史。目的是让加州大学的学术界、州政策制定者和加州人更好地了解加州大学的财务历史,尤其关注公共资金的重要作用。在最初的40年里,加州大学主要依靠联邦土地赠款和私人慈善事业产生的收入,以及少量来自州政府的资金。1911年标志着一个重要的转折点:从此,国家资助与学生入学工作量挂钩。因此,该大学在招生、学术课程和新校区方面随着加州人口的增长而增长。加州大学是加州唯一的赠地大学,这一历史性的承诺系统地资助了加州大学,帮助创建了现在被认为是世界上首屈一指的公立大学系统。然而,从20世纪90年代初开始,加州大学对每个学生的国家资助稳步下降。随着大衰退的开始,政府减少投资的模式显著增加。正如本报告所记载的那样,该大学将其收入来源多样化,并试图削减成本,以应对这种急剧下降,同时继续招收越来越多的加州学生。即使加州的经济有了显著的改善,国家对每个学生的资助仍然远远低于十年前。展望未来,这项研究还提供了一个历史上了解UC可用预算选项的招股说明书。伯克利和加州大学洛杉矶分校(UCLA)等个别院校或许能够创造其他收入来源,以维持其教学质量和声誉。但是,该系统并没有明确的融资模式或途径来满足加州人民的需求。加州大学可能正在接近一个临界点,它需要决定是在没有足够资金的情况下继续增加入学人数,还是限制入学人数和项目增长,专注于质量和生产力。资金支持由高盛公共政策学院高等教育研究中心、名誉发言人约翰·a·佩雷斯和加州大学伯克利分校院长亨利·e·布雷迪和鲍勃·雅各布森提供。本文仅代表作者个人观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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