哈佛大学现在对年收入低于20万美元的家庭实行“免费学费”。
Harvard Is Now "Tuition Free" For Familes Making Under $200,000 Per Year

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/harvard-now-tuition-free-familes-making-under-200000-year

从2025-26学年开始,哈佛大学将取消家庭年收入20万美元以下学生的学费,并为家庭年收入10万美元以下的学生提供免费食宿。这项旨在提高入学机会和促进学生群体多样化的举措,将惠及大约86%的美国家庭。此举是在大学学费不断上涨(精英大学的年学费已超过9万美元)以及大学捐赠基金面临越来越多的审查之际做出的。宾夕法尼亚大学和麻省理工学院也推出了类似的举措。哈佛大学依靠其530亿美元的捐赠基金提供经济援助,并通过实施招聘冻结来应对捐赠基金潜在的税收影响。新政策取消了之前家庭年收入最高15万美元需贡献10%收入的要求,并将根据具体情况增加年收入超过20万美元家庭的援助。


原文

For Harvard, at least, looks like there won't be any more need for the U.S. taxpayer to subsidize student loans...

That's because Harvard University will eliminate tuition for students from families earning $200,000 or less, aiming to expand access amid political scrutiny. Families making $100,000 or less will also receive free housing and meals, according to Bloomberg.

Similar initiatives were recently launched at the University of Pennsylvania and MIT as elite college costs surpass $90,000 annually. Harvard President Alan Garber said the move will “widen the array of backgrounds, experiences, and perspectives” students encounter.

Starting in 2025-26, the program will extend aid to about 86% of U.S. families, up from the current tuition-free threshold of $85,000.

Bloomberg writes that lawmakers are pushing to tax endowments, with Vice President JD Vance calling them “cancers on American society.” Harvard, which relies on its $53 billion endowment for financial aid, has responded with a hiring freeze as it assesses federal policy changes.

Tuition is about $57,000 annually, but over half of students receive aid. As college costs rise and student debt burdens grow, families are questioning the value of elite degrees. Schools like Penn and MIT are expanding aid—Penn no longer factors home equity into aid decisions and raised its full-tuition threshold to $200,000, while MIT will cover full costs for families earning under $100,000.

Harvard previously required families making up to $150,000 to contribute 10% of income but will now boost aid for those above $200,000 “depending on individual circumstances.”

William Fitzsimmons, Harvard’s dean of admissions and financial aid, concluded: “We know the most talented students come from different socioeconomic backgrounds and experiences, from every state and around the globe."

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