Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to feel sorry for Harvard and Yale?!
They had it coming - way too much wealth concentration used to let in kids that have no business being there based on race, FGLI, etc.
Anonymous wrote:What's stopping a university from splitting on paper into multiple universities each with slightly under 3000 tuition paying students to avoid the tax?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why they don't stop charging tuition. Or move the FA limits up to 500k HHI and 3mm assets. so only 20% pay tuition.
Princeton probably will, at least to get the number of tuition-paying students below 3,000. They aren’t that far off already.
No way they are going to let Princeton do a bit of wiggling to get off the hook. Some of the SLACs can probably get away with it but not Princeton.
The threshold is 3,000 tuition-paying students. This is the legal interpretation as provided by the IRS. It’s not about “letting” anyone get off the hook. If you have fewer than 3,000 students paying tuition because you gave them enough aid that their tuition is zero, you don’t pay the tax.
If you actually believe that Harvard and Princeton will be off the hook by increasing aid you are kidding yourself. This isn't about the money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to feel sorry for Harvard and Yale?!
They had it coming - way too much wealth concentration used to let in kids that have no business being there based on race, FGLI, etc.
Sure, why don’t Harvard and Yale just go back to admitting rich, white males like they did 60+ years ago. All of them definitely deserved to be there.
Anonymous wrote:What's stopping a university from splitting on paper into multiple universities each with slightly under 3000 tuition paying students to avoid the tax?
Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to feel sorry for Harvard and Yale?!
They had it coming - way too much wealth concentration used to let in kids that have no business being there based on race, FGLI, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Informative article with chart about the upcoming endowment tax on colleges & universities:
https://aei.org/education/how-much-will-universities-pay-in-endowment-tax/
How will this affect the college class of 2030? Will our kids have to pay higher tuition?
Anonymous wrote:Are we supposed to feel sorry for Harvard and Yale?!
They had it coming - way too much wealth concentration used to let in kids that have no business being there based on race, FGLI, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Informative article with chart about the upcoming endowment tax on colleges & universities:
https://aei.org/education/how-much-will-universities-pay-in-endowment-tax/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how any of this is constitutional. We have one man making all these capricious decisions regarding various individual universities. There's no method or system. Just whims and enemies.
Very banana republic.
Well this one is a tax on investment income passed by Congress so unfortunately it is very constitutional.
Ultimately I think Princeton and Dartmouth will escape through the tuition-paying threshold, and MIT and Rice might too. For the dozen or so others that this applies to, they will manage their investment income to reduce the tax burden. But even then it isn’t large. For example, even before taking steps to optimize tax efficiency, these tax estimates are generally less than one percent of these schools’ total endowments (~0.5 percent in many cases).
Sorry to repeat my question, but what is the definition of a tuition paying student for purposes of the excise tax on educational institutions endowment income ?
Are students who receive financial aid of any type which covers at least 100% of tuition "tuition paying students" ? I would argue that they are since tuition is still paid on their behalf even though through a financial aid fund. Accordingly, schools cannot escape the 3,000 tuition paying students threshold as easily as several posters have asserted.
All of this is in the comments above. A student whose entire tuition and fees are covered by scholarships or grants provided by the university or a federal, state, or local government is not tuition paying. Therefore they don’t count toward the 3,000 threshold.
Thank you, but I am still searching for the source. I have read & reread Sec 70415 of the One Big Beautiful Bill and am not finding any such definition. However, I did find section (h) within Sec 70415 which authorizes the establishment of rules to prevent educational institutions from restructuring endowment funds to reduce or eliminate value of/and assets "subject to the tax imposed by this section". This leads me to question whether educational institutions can alter the student count for purposes of the 3,000 tuition paying students. A concise source could address my concern.
Thank you to all who reply.
This may be a barrier to universities splitting endowment funds for multiple separate specialty schools.
In short, don't piss off the Big Guy.
Although I don’t want to understate Trumps vindictiveness, I think this is less about pissing him off and more about paying for his tax cuts by passing burden onto middle class families and working class families. Schools will have to increase full pay kids and cut scholarships to pay these taxes. So it helps rich families, who don’t care about the cost and can’t get their kids in more easily. It’s basically moving higher ed back to the 1940s when these schools were basically all rich kids. Unfortunately, we don’t have the manufacturing jobs to simply all the rest of the kids nowadays.
Anonymous wrote:The article gives us, essentially, a Top 25 list of schools with over 3,000 students based on objective criteria (endowment per student):
1) Harvard
2) Yale
3) Princeton
4) Stanford
5) MIT
6) Notre Dame
7) U Penn
8) Northwestern
9) WashUStL
10) Duke
11) Vanderbilt
12) Johns Hopkins University (JHU)
13) Dartmouth College
14) Brown
15) Emory
16) Rice
17) U Chicago
18) Columbia
19) U Richmond
20) Cornell
21) Carnegie Mellon University (CMU)
22) Colgate University
23) U Tulsa
24) College of the Holy Cross
25) Wesleyan University
Of course, several schools with an enrollment below 3,000 students are also powerhouses in terms of endowment per student; such schools include Amherst College & Williams College among others, but won't be subject to the endowment tax due to the small size of their respective students bodies.