Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer, but I hope you're right. We're a $350k HHI family with 2 kids in private and feel like it's a struggle to pay tuition every year. If it goes much higher, we won't be able to do it anymore.
We make about $300K and won't send our 2 kids to private for this reason, although it would be much better for them if we could (for different reasons for each one). You've validated my feeling that we can't really afford it. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any insight into why tuition has almost doubled in 6 years? I doubt the faculty are getting that much of a raise, property taxes have decreased, what is costing the schools so much money that they're increasing tuition this quickly?
I'm afraid it's about building the prettiest and best athletic or arts facility that most colleges don't even have. Is that what's going on?
Anonymous wrote:Is Private School Enrollment Generally Down? 03/2011
Is private school the next bubble? 02/2012
Article from The New York Times: Is Private School Not Expensive Enough? 12/2012
Anonymous wrote:I do not believe real estate market analogy would work for private education.
First, returns to private/public education is not necessarily observable.
Second, if there is "mispricing", prices will adjust, nobody would go bankrupt since you cannot short sell or go long education.
Third, the unlike the real estate market system is not inherently unstable since one cannot earn profits from price falls.
Finally, are the schools unable to fill up positions? Judging from all the wait-list excitement in the forum, I think not. There is still excess demand for better quality education. That is why prices of houses at good school districts did not fall compared to the rest of the nation even at the peak of the crisis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As most people on this forum are keenly aware, Private school tuition has climbed from 24K in 2006 to 35K-40K a year in 2013 ( nearly doubled in the last 6 years) . Many upper middle class families with incomes in 250K to 350K range feel priced out, particularly if they have 3 kids.
My question: are these schools using this money wisely ? Have the schools started to hit a tuition figure of diminishing return ( its so high they have to give more and more FA, to get the families they need/want) Why not just charge less, and give less FA ?
Is FA REALLY where this money is going in these "non-profits".
Something smells. I sense a bubble about to burst and last time I felt that way was 2005, 2006.
If the last time you felt this way was 2006, and tuitions have now doubled with applications going up, perhaps your analysis is off...
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer, but I hope you're right. We're a $350k HHI family with 2 kids in private and feel like it's a struggle to pay tuition every year. If it goes much higher, we won't be able to do it anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As most people on this forum are keenly aware, Private school tuition has climbed from 24K in 2006 to 35K-40K a year in 2013 ( nearly doubled in the last 6 years) . Many upper middle class families with incomes in 250K to 350K range feel priced out, particularly if they have 3 kids.
My question: are these schools using this money wisely ? Have the schools started to hit a tuition figure of diminishing return ( its so high they have to give more and more FA, to get the families they need/want) Why not just charge less, and give less FA ?
Is FA REALLY where this money is going in these "non-profits".
Something smells. I sense a bubble about to burst and last time I felt that way was 2005, 2006.
If the last time you felt this way was 2006, and tuitions have now doubled with applications going up, perhaps your analysis is off...
Anonymous wrote:As most people on this forum are keenly aware, Private school tuition has climbed from 24K in 2006 to 35K-40K a year in 2013 ( nearly doubled in the last 6 years) . Many upper middle class families with incomes in 250K to 350K range feel priced out, particularly if they have 3 kids.
My question: are these schools using this money wisely ? Have the schools started to hit a tuition figure of diminishing return ( its so high they have to give more and more FA, to get the families they need/want) Why not just charge less, and give less FA ?
Is FA REALLY where this money is going in these "non-profits".
Something smells. I sense a bubble about to burst and last time I felt that way was 2005, 2006.