Continued Higher Education Cuts Place Kentucky Among Worst in Country

May 19, 2016 at 02:34 pm by admin


Kentucky is continuing its tumble to the bottom as one of the worst states in funding cuts to higher education, a new report from the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities shows. Kentucky ranks 6th-worst among states in percentage cuts to higher education since 2008 and is in the bottom 10 among states in other funding categories, according to the report. This disinvestment once again threatens to limit students' access to higher education, as well as our state's opportunities for economic growth.

While most states have begun to restore higher education funding after cutting during the recession, Kentucky continues to cut, including with last-minute cuts for 2016 by Gov. Matt Bevin and with additional cuts coming in July when the new fiscal year begins -- all together a 4.5 percent cut. These continued cuts make it harder for students to afford college and for the state to invest in our communities and grow jobs and businesses.

"As Kentucky continues to cut, we start reversing all the gains made by past education improvements," Ashley Spalding, research and policy associate at the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy, said said. "We are sliding backwards, when what we should be doing is investing in our education institutions, which in turn is investment in our communities. We should follow the lead of the majority of states and start increasing funding for higher education again, instead of balancing our state budgets on the backs of students."

Some "lowlights" of Kentucky in the report:

In order to stop Kentucky's higher education funding slide, lawmakers should clean up the tax code by ending some of the billions of dollars in tax breaks that drain revenue so we have the resources to better invest, Spalding said.

For the average student, federal and state aid has not kept pace with rising costs, the report found.

"More young people could afford college and gain for themselves and the economy the benefits of greater earnings if states reversed their declining support for higher education," said Michael Mitchell, senior policy analyst at CBPP and lead author of the report.

To read the full report, click on "More" below.

KCEP

This article was produced by the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting, a nonprofit newsroom from Louisville Public Media. You can read more at KyCIR.org."

The Kentucky Center for Economic Policy is a non-profit, non-partisan initiative that conducts research, analysis and education on important policy issues facing the Commonwealth. Launched in 2011, the Center is a project of the Mountain Association for Community Economic Development (MACED). For more information, please visit KCEP's website at www.kypolicy.org.

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