Survey says: Americans still not sure where they stand on higher ed
Two opinion polls show (dis)agreement across and within parties
A few weeks before the presidential election, 国产视频 conducted two public opinion polls on higher education policies, a topic about which president-elect Trump was mostly quiet on the campaign trail. The first survey targeted likely voters; the second surveyed the general population.
On its own, public opinion doesn鈥檛 establish politicians鈥 positions, especially in relatively technical issues like higher education policy. Public opinion is also liable to change, as seen in the for Vladimir Putin and the 聽among self-identified Republicans. But though politicians are not entirely beholden to their constituents, they can only bend their voters’ preferences聽so much, and public opinion serves as a useful test of where, and how far, they can push.
Paying for college
Education beyond high school is not cheap, and though the costs affect Americans unequally, both Republican and Democrat likely voters largely agreed that higher education is getting harder to afford (75 percent and 93 percent, respectively). American workers will remain sorely in need of retraining if they are to keep their jobs in a quickly automating global economy, and likely voters acknowledged this, too: 73 percent of Republicans and 93 percent of Democrats agreed that education beyond high school is becoming more important to finding good work.听Even if Trump manages to replant some manufacturing jobs or reinvigorate building trades with , voters will still worry about the expense of the education and training that can help them advance.听
Still, our survey found that voters don鈥檛 necessarily approve of more free money: neither the majority of Republicans nor of Democrats approved of forgiving all outstanding student loan debt. We also asked for voters鈥 feelings about debt-free college proposals, though now in 国产视频 presidency such a plan has virtually no chance of becoming federal law. Among likely voters, debt-free college was popular among Democrats, and was also fairly well received among Republicans (as long as it had no income ceiling) with 52 percent approval.
Another interesting consensus emerged when we asked likely voters if they approved of giving students who 鈥渕aintain a GPA of 2.5 and volunteer or participate in a work-study program鈥 the opportunity to pursue a public four-year degree without going into debt: 61% of Republicans agreed, compared with 87% of Democrats. A similar proportion of Democrats supported a proposal guaranteeing community college tuition for students who attain the same GPA benchmark while attending at least part-time; for Republicans, however, approval dropped to 44%.听
Though more research will help to elaborate on these issues, our findings suggest that Republican voters could favor merit-based as opposed to need-based financial aid — tying grants to GPA, for instance. That would be likely to meet resistance from higher ed’s institutional lobbies (whose clients would lose out from a smaller supply of grant aid), and would be cause for concern among poorer students.听, and shifting from needs- to merit-based financial aid might further exacerbate the income achievement gap in American higher education.
Refinancing, Income-Based Repayment, & Public Service Loan Forgiveness
Debt refinancing and are two strategies that may get more play in 国产视频 administration, especially considering that his transition team – including its vice-president, Rep. Tom Reed – are generally of student loans. Refinancing may be a challenging position to pitch to Paul Ryan and the lean-government crowd , but 鈥渁llowing borrowers to refinance their loans at lower interest rates鈥 got 85 percent and 94 percent approval from Republicans and Democrats, respectively, in the likely-voter survey, and so may not be totally dead if public opinion prevails.
In the same survey, allowing borrowers 鈥渢o make monthly payments on an affordable percentage of their income鈥 saw approval rates of 84 percent and 93 percent among Republicans and Democrats, respectively. The dividing line came on when and if loans should be forgiven after regular payment. For most borrowers today, loans are forgiven after 20 years of payments in IBR. , an interval supported by 50 percent of the population. Most of that support came from Democrats and Independents, however, with only 38 percent of Republicans supporting forgiveness after 10 or 15 years. In fact, 50 percent of Republicans thought that loans should never be forgiven, while another 12 percent only approved of forgiveness after 20 or 25 years.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) works with IDR and allows for unlimited loan forgiveness for those who work in government or nonprofit sectors for 10 years while regularly paying a set percentage of their discretionary income. As an incentive for highly-educated professionals to take potentially lower-paying jobs in non-profits or government, it is a darling of some Democratic policymakers, but hated by Republicans for In our likely voter poll, 42 percent of Republicans approved of PSLF. That number鈥檚 surprisingly high, but likely not high enough to change a Republican lawmaker鈥檚 mind, and it signals that getting rid of the program incurs little political risk for Republicans.听Avenues for reforming the program also exist, but especially in light of of the program ( requested by Senate Republicans), PSLF may not be long for this world.
Accountability
Other survey topics addressed institutions鈥 responsibilities to their students and government鈥檚 responsibilities in holding institutions to a high standard.
The most surprising finding is that Republicans (along with everyone else) are very supportive of debt cancellation if the institutions that students attended were 鈥渇ound to have provided deceptive information to students about their programs of study and outcomes鈥. In that case, 87 percent of Democrats and 71 percent of Republicans surveyed in the nationwide poll agreed that debt should be 鈥渃anceled鈥 or 鈥渆nded鈥. So Republicans might need to tread more carefully when it comes to , which they have threatened to eliminate through .
Formulated in June 2015 as a response to the closure of the for-profit Corinthian Colleges network, and finalized in October of this year – just before ITT Technical Institute also folded – BDR allows cancellation of a student鈥檚 outstanding loan debts with reimbursement of those already paid. Borrowers are eligible if their institution is judged by state or federal governments to be guilty of 鈥渕isleading, deceitful, and predatory practices鈥, or of 鈥渇ailures to fulfill contractual promises鈥澛爓hile receiving federal aid. during their studies, and the regulations also set out financial conditions for institutions in danger of bankruptcy or closure, requiring that they demonstrate .听
These regulations, emboldened by the failures of Corinthian and ITT, have drawn fire from , as well as from budget-watchers who worry about , and from public and private non-profit institutions worried they may get pinched for innocent marketing mistakes. and pressure from these groups to annul it will be strong, but Trump may worry about the blowback from the public if he does so, especially .听
Other accountability measures proved less popular in our surveyed populations, however. In the nationwide study, self-identified Democrats were evenly split on whether to penalize institutions that had 鈥渁 large number of students who can鈥檛 pay back their student loans鈥 or had 鈥渁 large number of students who fail to get a job that pays at least what a high school graduate would earn鈥; a majority of Republicans opposed such measures, with 40% or more of them 鈥渟trongly鈥 opposed in each case. The Obama administration has pushed the metrics associated with these situations ( and ) as performance hurdles for institutions seeking federal aid, but according to our surveys, public support for these measures may be insufficient to keep them around. However, there was slightly higher approval (49% Republicans, 58% Democrats in the nationwide survey) for penalizing institutions with low overall graduation rates, and , Trump’s embattled Education Secretary nominee.
Compared with areas like immigration, foreign affairs, and healthcare policy, higher education policy is a less contentious and decidedly less visible political issue. Even so, our surveys show that there are battle-lines – though not all are drawn along party lines. Government funding, debt forgiveness, and personal responsibility are all areas of disagreement, and in these areas we should anticipate some substantive changes. There is clear bipartisan support for debt refinancing, income-driven repayment, and borrower protections from fraudulent or deceptive practices.
We admittedly did not expect a Trump presidency, and our surveys consequently didn鈥檛 engage with some of the policy areas that his administration may advance. Do Americans consider for-profits a necessary part of the education system? 聽Are universities right to monitor and moderate the freedom of speech on their campuses, or to address social inequities through affirmative action? And what about the huge endowments of the country鈥檚 best universities? Could we ?听
Answers to these questions – and even those we polled – remain in the territory of speculation. Donald Trump and his team have demonstrated a keen sense of what works for their voters through the election campaign, and only time will tell how much the Trump administration matches its higher education decisions to public opinion. If聽 last weekend were any indication, however, there will be plenty of public opinion to go around.
Methodology
The first, administered by Lake Research Partners and conducted September 30 鈥 October 3, 2016, reached a total of 800 likely 2016 voters nationwide, 446 from the landline sample and 354 from the cell phone sample. Telephone numbers for the likely voter sample were drawn from Catalist sample. The margin of error for the total sample is +/-3.5%. The data for likely voters were weighted slightly by gender, region, age, and race to reflect attributes of the actual population.
The second, administered by Caravan in a national omnibus survey conducted by telephone October 27 鈥 October 30, 2016, reached a total of 1,019 adults nationwide, 517 from landline sample and 502 from cell phone sample. The margin of error for the total sample is +/-3.1%. The data for adults were weighted slightly by gender, region, age, and race to reflect attributes of the actual population.
In interpreting survey results, all sample surveys are subject to possible sampling error: the results of a survey may differ from those which would be obtained if the entire population were interviewed. The size of the sampling error depends upon both the total number of respondents in the survey and the percentage distribution of responses to a particular question. For example, if 50% of respondents in a sample of 800 respondents answered 鈥淵es鈥 to a particular question, we can be 95% confident that the true percentage will fall within 3.5 points, or from 46.5% to 53.5%.听
These surveys were made possible through a generous grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
New America Lake Research Partners
Lake Research Partners is a leading public opinion and political strategy research firm providing expert research-based strategy for campaigns, issue advocacy groups, foundations, unions, and non-profit organizations.听
国产视频 Chesapeake Beach Consulting
Bob Carpenter, President and Founder of Chesapeake Beach Consulting has over 25 years of research experience and over 40 years of political experience. 聽He has worked in many policy areas including the education arena. 聽Prior to founding Chesapeake Beach Consulting, Bob worked for American Viewpoint, a Republican research company.