An Education in Price Discriminationcolleges charge more to those most willing to pay  Arnold Kling
   Kevin Carey writes,
 many  colleges hire expensive consulting firms to help them manage a complex  process of marketing, admissions, and pricing. The firms design social  media campaigns and produce the flood of glossy brochures that pours  through the U.S. postal system every year. They take the wealth of  detailed financial information that parents are required to disclose on  the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, and feed it into  the same kinds of complex algorithms that airlines use to constantly  change the price of seats in the months, weeks, and days before a  flight.
  The real market tuition price in the big middle of the  higher education sector is probably about $25,000, not the $50,000 or  $60,000 you might have heard. Applying to college there isn’t like being  vetted to join an exclusive social club. Nobody is really judging your  worthiness for financial aid. College is just another service with a  price.
  Colleges engage in price discrimination.  They  try to charge full tuition to parents who are willing to pay and give  financial aid to those less willing to pay.  
  Price discrimination  is widespread in today’s economy.  When I taught economics to high  school seniors, I used the catch-phrase “price discrimination explains  everything.”  Because whenever a student had a question about a business  practice, the answer often turned out to be that the practice allowed  the firm to segment the market into those willing to pay high prices and  those willing only to pay low prices.  Airlines charging lower ticket  prices to flyers who book long in advance or who fly standby is a  classic example.  Stores offering coupons are another.  Cable TV  bundling is yet another.
  Often, price discrimination causes those  who can afford it to pay the most.  Business travelers typically find it  impractical to fly standby or to book far in advance, so they tend to  bear the brunt of price discrimination in air travel.
  But what  Carey points out about colleges is that the wealthiest parents often are  not the ones willing to pay the most.  They are shrewd about the game  colleges are playing, and they hold out for big discounts.  Instead, it  is the upwardly-mobile student whose parents are not aware of the steep  discounts that are available who ends up paying closer to full tuition.
  arnoldkling.substack.com |