Hey, didn't I talk about this already?
Three times in fact.
The Times article focuses on small colleges in the Midwest. But the same phenomenon will affect colleges across the country. The higher education economic model in the U.S. has long been to charge foreign students the full tuition to subsidize aid packages and scholarships offered to American students. If foreign students stop coming, college costs for Americans will rise.
Three times in fact.
The Times article focuses on small colleges in the Midwest. But the same phenomenon will affect colleges across the country. The higher education economic model in the U.S. has long been to charge foreign students the full tuition to subsidize aid packages and scholarships offered to American students. If foreign students stop coming, college costs for Americans will rise.