Are There Simply Too Many Colleges?
Should there be a commission to recommend colleges for closure?
National Review reports.
Too Many Colleges?
Yikes, let’s not do more central planning.
I respect Jeff Selingo, a former editor of the Chronicle of Higher Education, partly because he sees the potential for disruptive technology in higher education. (His book College (Un)Bound: The Future of Higher Education and What It Means for Students recently came out in paperback.)
But I’m disappointed. Maybe he doesn’t understand free markets, after all. In his latest Washington Post column, he expresses concern that the 5,300 colleges and universities that exist in the United States are too many. And he offers a solution:
What we need is a federal commission similar to those that have been tasked with closing military bases over the years. In the case of higher education, this commission wouldn’t just recommend colleges for closure, but it also could identify where mergers or alliances could produce the best solution for clusters of struggling institutions.