Get the checkbook out: Fall college tuition bills are coming due, and if the number behind that dollar sign seems high, well, it is.
"I'm just appalled by what I hear these kids are getting into," former Hopkins resident Thomas Brokl said of the student debt young people routinely take on to pay for college — typically around $25,000.
Brokl, who earned his degree from the University of Minnesota in the late 1960s, wrote in to Curious Minnesota asking how tuition has changed at our flagship university since he was there, when he recalled paying about $150 a quarter.
His estimate isn't far off. A full academic year at the time would have set him back just $294, according to data from the University's Office of Institutional Research. That's about $2,300 in today's dollars after adjusting for inflation.
But the University of Minnesota has a price tag of $15,236 for this school year, putting the cost for four years north of $60,000. Put another way, today's Gopher is paying over 500% more for a bachelor's degree than Brokl did. That's for in-state undergraduate tuition and fees and doesn't include housing or other living expenses.
Meanwhile, real wages for low and middle-class earners have increased 6% or less since 1979, according to a recent congressional research report.
The same congressional report notes, however, that those with at least a bachelor's degree have fared far better economically than those with a high school diploma — a "premium" that could explain why demand for a college degree is higher than during Brokl's days at the U, when, nationwide, roughly half of high school graduates went on to college.
About 70% of today's Minnesota high schoolers head to a two- or four-year college right after graduation, a figure that had been inching up for years, according to the Minnesota Office of Higher Education.