Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Nerd News: Administrators Ate My Tuition!

Again with the administrative bloat and its horrible cost!  I keep going on and on about this, and it's depressing and infuriating.  Here in a poli sci professor's article is more evidence that administrative bloat is killing higher ed:



The priorities of the hyper-administrative university emerge most clearly during times of economic crisis, when managers are forced to make choices among spending options. Thanks to the sharp economic downturn that followed America’s 2008 financial crisis, almost every institution, even Harvard, America’s wealthiest school, has been compelled to make substantial cuts in its expenditures. What cuts did university administrations choose to make during these hard times? 
A tiny number of schools took the opportunity to confront years of administrative and staff bloat and moved to cut costs by shedding unneeded administrators and their brigades of staffers. The most notable example is the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine, which in February 2009 addressed a $100 million budget deficit by eliminating fifteen “leadership positions,” along with 450 staff jobs, among other cuts. The dean also emphasized that faculty would not be affected by the planned budget cuts. Chicago’s message was clear: administrators and staffers were less important than teaching, research, and—since this involved a medical school—patient care; if the budget had to be cut, it would be done by thinning the school’s administrative ranks, not by reducing its core efforts. 
Unfortunately, few if any other colleges and universities copied the Chicago model. Facing budgetary problems, many schools eliminated academic programs and announced across-the-board salary and hiring freezes, which meant that vacant staff and faculty positions, including the positions of many adjunct professors, would remain unfilled until the severity of the crisis eased. 
Perverse administrative priorities were even more in evidence at a number of schools that actually raised administrative salaries or opted to spend more money on administrative services while cutting expenditures on teaching and research in the face of budget deficits. For example, in January 2009, facing $19 million in budget cuts and a hiring freeze, Florida Atlantic University awarded raises of 10 percent or more to top administrators, including the school’s president. In a similar vein, in February 2009, the president of the University of Vermont defended the bonuses paid to the school’s twenty-one top administrators against the backdrop of layoffs, job freezes, and program cuts at the university. The university president, Daniel Fogel, asserted that administrative bonuses were based on the principles of “extra pay for extra duties” and “pay for performance.” The president rejected a faculty member’s assertion that paying bonuses to administrators when the school faced an enormous budget deficit seemed similar to the sort of greed recently manifested by the corporate executives who paid themselves bonuses with government bailout money. Fogel said he shared the outrage of those upset at corporate greed, but maintained there was a “world of difference” between the UVM administrative bonuses and bonuses paid to corporate executives. He did not specify what that world might be. 
In the meantime the president of Washington State University, Elson Floyd, accepted a $125,000 pay raise, bringing his 2009 salary to $725,000 per year, soon after announcing that financial circumstances required the school to freeze hiring. 
As I have often said, you could hire an entire army of actual instructors if you just got rid of a bunch of admin slots.  Of course, admin edu-crats are circling the wagons.  Surely we all MUST run a million committees on (insert trendy thing here) even at the cost of laying off people who actually teach students who are paying to be taught by teachers!

2 comments:

Brian J. Dunn said...

Yeah. Someone I know who has reason to know about this situation said the basic problem is that leading universities need a permanent (and growing) staff to win private and government grants.

I sometimes think (without having the background to really judge if it is possible, I admit)that the best things universities could do is spin off the research side into separate businesses ("nonprofit" if it lets them sleep better at night) so the teaching side can be addressed on its own merits.

Mad Minerva said...

Pretty much, yeah, though that's only only it -- admin ends up fussing around with all sorts of things, none of which is about teaching. In the end, teaching and those who do it are turning into second-class citizens on campus whose opinions don't matter.