Forbes Asia - October 2018

(Steven Felgate) #1
OCTOBER 2018 FORBES ASIA | 39

WAITING FOR Mitch Daniels to
pick up a call to his oice in We s t
Lafayette, Indiana, you hear a re-
cording of Purdue’s marching band
followed by a hard-to-believe state-
ment: “Purdue has frozen tuition
at 2012 levels through 2019 for all
undergraduate students.”
Daniels, the president of In-
diana’s lagship public university,
then gets on the phone and says
something even more startling: In
inlation-adjusted dollars, Pur-
due costs $4,000 less per year for
out-of-state students than it did
when he took the job in 201 3.
In-staters pay nearly $3,000 less, at
just under $23,000 this academic
year for tuition, room, board and
expenses.
Back in 201 3, Daniels, now 69,
dashed hopes that he would run
for the Republican presidential
nomination, signing on at Purdue
instead ater two terms as Indiana’s
popular moderate GOP gover-
nor—and setting out to ix the bro-
ken business of higher ed. His irst
priority: make good on Purdue’s
mission as a land-grant university,
a designation dating back to the
Civil Wa r, when the federal gov-

ernment allotted land and funds
to universities that would teach
agriculture and the mechanical arts
to working-class Americans.
Daniels believed Purdue wasn’t
fulilling that mission. “he only
costs that have outrun healthcare
in the last three decades are college
tuition, room and board,” he says.
His solution: Freeze student costs
at 2012 levels. Purdue’s admissions
stafers balked. “I said, ‘Look, I just
landed here on Mars, and I can tell
you that the people back on Earth
think college costs too much.’ ”
Attacking afordability from an-
other angle, in 2016 he introduced
income-share agreements. Students
who exhaust federal loans can fund
their education with an agreement
to sign over a share of their future
income, usually between 3%
and 5 % for up to ten years ater
they graduate. (Repayments are
capped at 2. 5 times initial costs.)
Critics hate ISAs because they’re
unregulated and untested. Milton
Friedman is said to have invented
the idea but famously noted that
they were “economically equivalent

... to partial slavery.” Daniels says,
“If you want indentured servitude,


it’s the student-loan program. With
ISAs, the risk shits entirely to the
lender,” since grads who don’t ind
work pay nothing.
Daniels’ third bold move invited
the most criticism from higher-ed
purists. Last year he paid $1—yes,
a dollar—to acquire the belea-
guered for-proit, largely online
Kaplan University from former
Washington Post owner Graham
Holdings Co. Purdue instantly
boosted its enrollment by 30,000
Kaplan students—most of whom
are female, between the ages of
30 and 60, and the irst in their
families to go to college. hey are
now working toward degrees at the
newly named Purdue Global Uni-
versity. Ater Purdue covers operat-
ing costs and collects $ 50 million in
tuition, Kap lan is entitled to 1 2. 5 %
of Purdue Global’s revenue.

So far, so good. Applications
are up 67% since Daniels became
president. Enrollment is at an all-
time high, as are alumni donations,
graduation rates and the number
of startups launched by Purdue
researchers. Purdue also ranks
No. 126 on Forbes’ list of America’s
top colleges, up from No. 143 last
year. While other institutions are
cutting tenure-track jobs, Purdue
has added 75 tenured engineering
professorships and increased the
number of students earning STEM
degrees by 33% (minorities are up
5 0%).
hen there’s Boiler Gold, a crat
beer on which Purdue’s hops and
brewing analysis lab is collaborat-
ing with a local brewer. “It started
as a research project,” says Daniels,
“and now we can’t make the stuf
fast enough.”

1Enrollment is total number of undergraduates. Annual cost is the estimated total cost of attendance for out-of-state students living on campus in 2017–2018.
2Tuition is for the 2017–2018 academic year. Source: National Center for Education Statistics.


1
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA,
LOS ANGELES
Los Angeles
TUITION2
$13,261

2
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA,
BERKELEY
Berkeley, CA
$14,170

3
BRIGHAM
YOUNG
UNIVERSITY
Provo, UT
$5,460

4
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA,
IRVINE
Irvine, CA
$13,738

5
UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINGTON–
SEATTLE
Seattle
$10,974

BEST VALUE SCHOOLS
These universities score well on net price, net student debt, alumni earnings,
timely graduation, school quality and access for low-income students.
For public institutions, we used in-state tuition. To see the full list of
Best Value Colleges, go to forbes.com/best-value-colleges.

6
HARVARD
UNIVERSITY
Cambridge, MA
$48,949

7
STANFORD
UNIVERSITY
Stanford, CA
$49,617

8
PRINCETON
UNIVERSITY
Princeton, NJ
$47,140

9
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA,
SAN DIEGO
La Jolla, CA
$14,018

10
AMHERST
COLLEGE
Amherst, MA
$54,310

THE MOST GRATEFUL GRADS
How to measure college ROI: Find the schools with the alumni who give back in droves.
7-YEAR MEDIAN 3-YEAR 2018
DONATIONS PER AVERAGE ALUMNI GRATEFUL
COLLEGE STUDENT PARTICIPATION GRAD INDEX
1 DARTMOUTH COLLEGE $24,039 41.3% 99.81
2 WILLIAMS COLLEGE 23,434 47.8 99.77
3 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 23,536 40.5 99.67
4 AMHERST COLLEGE 21,354 45.1 99.38
5 DAVIDSON COLLEGE 19,994 44.5 99.05
6 CLAREMONT MCKENNA COLLEGE 22,776 33.8 98.8
7 HAVERFORD COLLEGE 19,810 38.1 98.68
8 WELLESLEY COLLEGE 16,328 49.0 97.79
9 WABASH COLLEGE 19,850 31.4 97.78
10 UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME 17,472 35.5 97.64

F

Purdue’s Bold Plan


Mitch Daniels wants to make college more
aordable and increase his university’s
enrollment. Higher-ed purists are aghast.

TOP: TIMPANNELL FOR FORBES

BY SUSAN ADAMS
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