A recently completed study urges state leaders to increase spending on public higher education to address the immediate financial crisis accompanying the COVID-19 pandemic and to build a more just and equitable economy in the Commonwealth.
"It would be difficult to identify investment, public or private, that offers greater short-run and long-run benefits," writes University of Massachusetts Amherst professor Michael Ash in "An Economic Analysis of Investment in Public Higher Education in Massachusetts: Recovering from the COVID-19 Crisis and Laying Foundations for the Future." Ash, a professor of economics and public policy, and Shouvik Chakraborty of the Political Economy Research Institute at UMass Amherst, prepared the report with support from the Massachusetts Society of Professors and the MTA. The study’s key findings include:
Open advertisement in lightbox
Paid Advertisement
Offering 100% Online
Graduate Programs in Education
Program Includes
- Master of Science in Education (MSEd)
- Master of Science in Education: Reading Specialist (MSEd-RS)
- Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study (CAGS)
- Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study: Advanced Educational Leadership (CAGS AEL)
- Post-Master’s Certificate (PMC)
- Doctor of Education (Ed.D)
Why UNE Online?
- Learn on your schedule in a flexible study format
- No GRE required
- Dynamic faculty of practitioners, researchers and educators
- Designated student support specialists
- Complete in one to three years
LEARN MORE TODAY
800.994.2804 | [email protected] | online.une.edu
- Increasing investment in public higher education will create more jobs in the short term compared to other sectors with comparable levels of spending such as casino construction and public road construction.
- In the absence of significant federal stimulus, a progressive tax plan in Massachusetts will equitably fund the greater investment in public higher education, and that investment will yield better returns than other types of spending.
- By making public education more accessible and increasing enrollment, the state will have a larger tax base of people with better-paying jobs.
- When wealth is more equitably spread across the Commonwealth, there will be a reduction in the need for spending on public welfare, Medicaid and other social safety net programs.
"As we face down the effects of a global pandemic and the convulsions of systemic racism, it is time to recognize the vital role that public education plays in creating a more just society," said MTA President Merrie Najimy. "Any state leader who suggests that now is the time to cut spending on public education is acting irresponsibly."
"This study should convince policymakers and the public that investment in public higher education is precisely the medicine we need to help cure the economic crisis that has followed the COVID-19 health crisis," said MTA Vice President Max Page. "Support for public higher education is the ladder out of this terrible economic collapse."
To read the full report on the impact of higher ed spending, please visit massteacher.org/HEstudy.
