Sunday, March 23, 2025

Easy Sunday: College costs, then and now.


1971 Spring Semester: Tuition. Board, and Room.


Starting this fall, Harvard University students with family incomes of $200,000 and under will have their tuition covered. 

The previous cutoff was family income of $85,000.

Current Harvard tuition:               $  59,076
Books and supplies:                    $    1,000
Room and board:                         $  20,374
Health plan and other services    $    5,794
         TOTAL                                 $ 86,244

In 1967-1971 college cost me about $5,000 a year, all in, including travel from Medford to Boston. Tuition my first year was $1,800 a year. It grew to $2,000 a year in my senior year, as illustrated in the photo above.

College is about 17 times as expensive now as it was for me 58 years ago. That is about two and a half times the rate of general inflation over that period, which is a multiple of seven. With about $1,000/year help from my parents, plus summer jobs fighting forest fires, plus a melon crop, plus work-study jobs during the school year, I got through four years without taking on debt. The $1,000/year from my parents was a sacrifice for them. My father was an elementary school principal and my mother was a secretary at the Bureau of Land management. That $1,000/year was about seven percent of their pretax income. Notice the $350 credit in the college bill. That scholarship was an amount slightly greater than my cost for board. The dollar amount seems small now, but it was large in relation to costs. It was essential to my being able to attend.

The income a young man could earn then was far greater in relation to college costs than it is today. My work-study job cleaning dorm rooms and checking out books at the main research library paid $2.00/hour, rising to $2.20/hour my senior year. That meant that 909 hours at that job would have been sufficient to pay my tuition. That job checking out books exists today, and it pays $15/hour. The ratio of work-to-costs has changed dramatically; 909 hours of that work today would be $13,635, less than a quarter of the tuition cost. 

A few things are less expensive now. A 15-minute phone call home to Oregon during late night hours used to cost me $3.50 -- or almost two hours of work. Now better-quality calls, with video, are free. Cross-country air travel was far more expensive in 1970, when compared to college costs. Flying "student standby," which meant half-price if there were unsold seats -- which I found were always available -- meant each one-way trip across the country was about $100, equal to about 5 percent of my tuition. (I dressed up to fly in a coat and tie.) Today Expedia shows a cross-country flight, Boston to Medford, as might be booked by a student flying home for the summer at the end of May this year, would be $157 -- incredibly cheap! -- or about a quarter of one percent of the tuition cost.

Harvard was the most expensive college in America back then. Now many private schools are more expensive. Harvard gets criticized for being "too rich," but I am happy it has its endowment and can put it to good use. If I were going to college now, with parents doing the same jobs as they had back in 1970, college would be tuition-free. If I had not had the melon crop as the second summer job, I could not have swung it.

Below are the kind of melons I grew and sold at Blunt's Ranch Market on Highway 99 south of Medford, and at Sherm's Thunderbird Market on West Main Street in Medford.

Tuscan-style cantaloupes 



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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I attended state college in California in the early-80's, and my tuition was $250 per quarter (3 quarters per year) for a full-load, plus about $100 per quarter for highly technical books. So, it cost me about $1,000 per year for college, which is a steal of a deal.

Mike Steely said...

A number of countries – Germany, Austria, Sweden, Denmark and France, among others – provide tuition-free education at public colleges, and they have universal healthcare. But they don’t have the richest man in the world taking a chainsaw to their government and cutting off food aid to starving children. We’re still number one!

Anonymous said...

As per your comment:
"Today Expedia shows a cross-country flight, Boston to Medford, as might be booked by a student flying home for the summer at the end of May this year, would be $157 -- incredibly cheap!

I will look this up. I can hardly ever find cheap rates like this out of Medford.

John C said...

From what I have read, the mission of earlier higher general education was to ensure that “undergraduates obtain foundational communication, analytical and critical thinking skills and cultural literacies” - essentially about preparing students for adult life.

When I counsel young undergrads in my company about career goals and aspirations, I often ask about their world view or philosophy of life. They often look blankly at me. Most of them have never taken a single humanities course. Ever. They don’t have the vocabulary to even discuss those kinds of questions. And why would they if it doesn’t prepare them for a well-paying career? University for them was purely vocational training for their careers in business or technology.

Higher education costs for them were about ROI. So I think tuition and debt has risen to meet the market tolerance for cost based on income potential. Unfortunately an undergrad degree in elementary education costs about the same as a computer science major, but with different outcomes on career income. And if students keep paying, why wouldn’t university’s keep charging? It is a business after all.

Anonymous said...

Philosophy and psychology were my first college courses. I’m still learning.

Michael Trigoboff said...

I had free tuition at Brooklyn College. I graduated in 1967 as a philosophy major. In my senior year, I took a BC’s only computer programming elective, fell in love with it, and that changed the whole course of my life.