Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Sunday, June 07, 2020
Almost Half Of Universities May Be Gone In 5 To 10 Years, Professor Admits
An NYU professor of business surmises
that because of the effects of the coronavirus, anywhere from
one-quarter to almost one-half of universities in the nation may go out
of business in the next five to ten years. NYU professor Scott Galloway
also admitted that foreign students paying full tuition are the “cash
cow” for universities and “might decide not to show up.” He commented,
“What department stores were to retail, tier-two higher tuition
universities are about to become to education and that is they are soon
going to become the walking dead.” Speaking with Hari Sreenivasanon on PBS’ “Amanpour and Co.,” Galloway spoke of the impact of the coronavirus on colleges and universities, forcing them to hold their classes over the internet, and how that may catalyze flight from the universities and the universities’ subsequent downfall. Galloway stated, “Students I think across America along with their families listening in on these Zoom classes are all beginning to wonder what kind of value, or lack thereof, they’re getting for their tuition dollars … There’s generally a recognition or disappointment across America, and I would argue that it’s not that they’re disappointed in the Zoom classes, it’s more the recognition that Zoom has uncovered how disappointing college education is. I think there’s a lot of households saying, ‘This is what we’re paying for?’”...Speaking of the fact that many students might take a “gap year,”
Galloway posited, “There’s gonna be a waterfall; there’s gonna be demand
destruction because more people are gonna take gap years, and you’re
gonna see increased pressure to lower costs. So just as equity analysts
are looking at which companies have cash on balance to survive this
shock, you’re gonna see an incredible destruction among companies that
have the following factors: a tier-two brand; expensive tuition, and low
endowments. There are 4,500 universities in the U.S., you could see a
thousand to two thousand go out of business in the next five to ten
years. What department stores were to retail, tier-two higher tuition
universities are about to become to education and that is they are soon
going to become the walking dead.”...MORE
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