logo
Weather page
GET THE APP
ePaper
google_play
app_store
  • Login
  • E-Edition
  • Sports
  • Obits
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Classifieds
    • Place an Ad
    • All Listings
    • Jobs
  • SPECIAL SECTIONS
  • GALLERY
  • CONTESTS
  • LIFESTYLE/ENTERTAINMENT
  • GAMES
  • Allegany County Source
    • News
      • local
      • state
      • nation/world
    • Sports
      • local
      • college
      • State
      • national
    • obits
    • Opinion
      • News
        • local
        • state
        • nation/world
      • Sports
        • local
        • college
        • State
        • national
      • obits
      • Opinion
    logo
    • Classifieds
      • Place an Ad
      • All Listings
      • Jobs
    • E-Edition
    • Subscribe
    • Login
      • Classifieds
        • Place an Ad
        • All Listings
        • Jobs
      • E-Edition
      • Subscribe
      • Login
    Home Articles Break up the Ivy League? Maybe it's time
    Articles, Commentary, Nation World
    June 2, 2025

    Break up the Ivy League? Maybe it’s time

    NEW YORK (TNS) — It pains me to say this, as both an economist and a graduate of Columbia, but: It may be time to break up not only Columbia but also America’s entire system of elite higher education.

    America’s large private research universities, such as Columbia and Harvard, have long been crucial to its economic exceptionalism. The symbiotic relationship between universities and the federal government, which subsidizes tuition and funds research, has created growth and innovation that is the envy of the world.

    Now, instead of being a source of national pride, many elite universities have become a source of national division, with some Americans viewing them as decadent, hypocritical or even hostile to their values.

    It was thus inevitable they’d become a target of President Donald Trump’s administration. First it capped NIH grant reimbursements for costs indirectly related to research (utilities, administration, facilities, and so on), and it is now cutting grants entirely at elite research universities such as Harvard. The administration is also threatening to revoke the tax-exempt status of its endowment and trying to prevent Harvard from enrolling foreign students, a critical source of funding and talent.

    Universities say these cuts are ending important research projects into diseases such as cancer and ALS. European universities, sensing an opportunity, are trying to poach talented professors and students in the U.S., many of whom are European and came to the U.S. because it is more lucrative.

    Federal money helps to pay those higher salaries, as well as to defray research costs. This is why U.S. universities have become the world’s research centers, attracting the most talented students and scientists, many of whom stay and make enormous contributions to the U.S. economy — such as Elon Musk.

    This whole system is mostly the brainchild of Vannevar Bush (yes, of that Bush family) who headed the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development during World War II and advocated for government support of research in the university system. His view was that if scientific research happened at universities, it would be protected from political influence.

    There turned out to be other benefits too: More money and prestige made American universities the best in the world. Universities doing research could attract and retain the best talent, which wouldn’t be satisfied just teaching undergraduates. They could also train graduate students.

    Some eight decades after Bush first advertised his ideas, however, many taxpayers have come to see elite universities as overtly political institutions. It is not just the lack of intellectual diversity among the faculty. It’s the research tinged with politics, the canceled speakers, the discrimination in hiring and admissions, the loyalty oaths, the institutional statements on issues that had nothing to do with the university. The response of many universities to the events and aftermath of Oct. 7, 2023, only served to highlight how out of touch they were.

    True, most science researchers have little to no engagement with politics. So why should they and their research be punished? The answer is that they shouldn’t — and that’s why the research university model may not work anymore.

    Universities played a critical role in the U.S. economy in the 20th century, but in the 21st they have strayed from their mission. If the implicit bargain of Vannevar Bush was taxpayer money in exchange for staying out of politics, then too many universities have not lived up to it. It’s not so much that the scientific research itself is tainted by politics; it’s that the institutions themselves are.

    The question is not whether the U.S. system of higher education needs to change, but how. The current arrangement, apolitical graduate scientific research programs paired with highly political undergraduate arts and humanities departments, has become untenable.

    Taxpayers may be OK with subsidizing cancer research or an education for the less fortunate, but not with the excesses of what some universities have become. The subsidies may have also blunted market signals, resulting in too many students getting useless degrees.

    At the same time, government-supported research is critical to America’s long-term economic success. One option is breaking up universities. For a university such as Columbia, for example, the engineering, medical and business schools, along with some of the hard sciences, could form one entity. The college, the humanities, and the social-science schools and departments could form another and continue with their activism.

    Alternatively, if the U.S. wants to keep the private elite research universities in their current form, they will need to make sincere and major changes. Universities have always had professors who say and even teach offensive things. The more recent failure involved extreme views becoming university policy. That is an institutional failure that is not easily remedied.

    Institutions evolve over time, of their own initiative or at the behest of society. One of the strongest criticisms of the Trump administration’s policies is that they are rash; university faculty and administrators are right that Trump has gone too far and suppressed their independence and free speech. The restrictions on foreign students may be his most economically destructive policy yet.

    But Trump’s attacks on the U.S. system of higher education didn’t come from nowhere. Given the behavior of America’s great universities over the last decade, it is hard to have much sympathy — or to believe they are capable of a transformation. Their entire economic model, weakened from within, is now under pressure from external forces.

    The threat of a breakup may be the only thing that can force them to change.

    (Allison Schrager is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering economics. A senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, she is author of “An Economist Walks Into a Brothel: And Other Unexpected Places to Understand Risk.”)

    Olean Times Herald

    Local & Social
    Latest news for you
    Outrage over Trump’s electric vehicle policies is misplaced
    Commentary, Opinion
    Outrage over Trump’s electric vehicle policies is misplaced
    By ASHLEY NUNES Chicago Tribune 
    June 5, 2025
    BOSTON (TNS) — Electric car subsidies are heading for the chopping block. A tax bill recently passed by House Republicans is set to stop billions in t...
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    Commentary, Opinion
    Guns aren’t the No. 1 threat to US kids? Tell that to mothers
    By JESSIE BUSTAMANTE 
    June 5, 2025
    KANSAS CITY, Mo. (TNS) — To read David Mastio’s recent column about gun violence among America’s children, one would think this epidemic is nothing bu...
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    Commentary, Opinion
    Bill could push Putin to the peace table
    June 5, 2025
    President Donald Trump spoke to Russia’s Vladimir Putin for more than an hour on Wednesday about Ukraine. But results remain elusive. “It was a good c...
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    A paint-by-numbers ‘Karate Kid: Legends’ packs nostalgic punch
    Lifestyles
    A paint-by-numbers ‘Karate Kid: Legends’ packs nostalgic punch
    Kellen Quigley 
    June 5, 2025
    Think back to your favorite films as a kid — or your children’s favorite films when they were kids — and you’re likely thinking of a pretty mediocre o...
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    Allegany-Limestone prom court crowned
    High School
    Allegany-Limestone prom court crowned
    June 5, 2025
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    Ellicottville’s Summer Music Festival promises a music-packed weekend
    Lifestyles, Local News
    Ellicottville’s Summer Music Festival promises a music-packed weekend
    Deb Everts 
    June 5, 2025
    ELLICOTTVILLE — Rock the Fourth of July weekend at Ellicottville’s Summer Music Festival, July 4–6, when the Ellicottville Chamber of Commerce will pr...
    Read More...
    {"to-print":"To Print", "website":"Website"}
    Allegany County Source
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Cattaraugus County Source
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    This Week's Ads
    Current e-Edition
    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Already a subscriber? Click the image to view the latest e-edition.
    Don't have a subscription? Click here to see our subscription options.
    Mobile App

    Download Now

    The Salamanca Press mobile app brings you the latest local breaking news, updates, and more. Read the Salamanca Press on your mobile device just as it appears in print.

    ePaper
    google_play
    app_store
    Trending Recipes

    Help Our Community

    Please help local businesses by taking an online survey to help us navigate through these unprecedented times. None of the responses will be shared or used for any other purpose except to better serve our community. The survey is at: www.pulsepoll.com $1,000 is being awarded. Everyone completing the survey will be able to enter a contest to Win as our way of saying, "Thank You" for your time. Thank You!

    Get in touch with Olean Times Herald

    Submit Content
    Send a Letter to the Editor Place Wedding Announcement Place Engagement Announcement
    Advertise
    Place Birth Announcement Place Anniversary Announcement Place Obituary
    Subscribe
    Start a Subscription e-Edition Contact Us
    Illinois Hancock Journal-Pilot Iroquois Times-Republic Journal-Republican The News-Gazette
    Indiana Fountain Co. Neighbor Herald Journal KV Post News Newton Co. Enterprise Rensselaer Republican Review-Republican
    Iowa Atlantic News Telegraph Audubon Advocate-Journal Barr's Post Card News Burlington Hawk Eye Collector's Journal Fayette County Union Ft. Madison Daily Democrat Independence Bulletin-Journal Keokuk Daily Gate City Oelwein Daily Register Vinton Newspapers Waverly Newspapers
    Michigan Iosco County News-Herald Ludington Daily News Oceana's Herald-Journal Oscoda Press White Lake Beacon New York Finger Lakes Times Olean Times Herald Salamanca Press
    Pennsylvania Bradford Era Clearfield Progress Courier Express Free Press Courier Jeffersonian Democrat Leader Vindicator Potter Leader-Enterprise The Wellsboro Gazette
    © Copyright Olean Times Herald 639 Norton Drive, Olean, NY 14760  | Terms of Use  | Privacy Policy
    Powered by TECNAVIA