▲ | runako 6 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> What stops the higher ed players from regulatory capture of the state agency in charge of those subsidies and milking that cow for all it's got? Yes, you are correct that a corrupt state will deliver poor results. A key bulwark against in many places is effective oversight of public assets and administrations. But a corrupt state also could do much worse than $35k for undergraduate tuition. Which suggests priorities are being set to accomplish a different set of goals. Also keep in mind that the primary mechanism here is not adding regulation. Rather, it's about things like ensuring universities have enough open slots for the children matriculating through their K-12 programs. Think about it more in the way states are generally capable of managing and subsidizing/funding student education at the K-12 level. Bigger picture: consider why it should even be seen to be such a massive difference in capability for a state to run a public education program for the 4 years after high school vs the first 13 years. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | lxm 5 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Has this - “effective oversight of public assets and administrations” - happened in other systems with significant state involvement, like secondary ed, healthcare or infrastructure projects? My view is skewed towards California, where admittedly examples of cost decreases through economies of scale are lacking. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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