The
document below was written by two members of the Academic Council who served on
the Rebenching Task Force. Susan Gillman is the chair of the Academic
Senate at UC Santa Cruz, and Jim Chalfant is the chair of the University
Committee on Planning and Budget. An earlier version of the document was circulated
on June 18 to the Academic Council to provide information on the
recommendations from the Task Force, whose report had not yet been completed,
and to identify outstanding issues. On June 21 the Task Force report was
released, too late for a full, systemwide review. This updated document will provide the UC
community at large with the best information and analysis of the rebenching
recommendations that is currently available.
REBENCHING: A GUIDE AND UPDATE
As Academic Senate representatives on the Rebenching Task
Force, we have been asked a number of questions about the process and the
implications for future budgets. We
concluded that an informational and analytic document such as this one is
needed.
What is rebenching?
The University of California process for allocating over
$2B in annual state funding is poorly understood, impossible to explain, and
misaligned with the University’s priorities.
After years of inaction, under the pressure of continually declining
state resources, in 2008 the UC Office of the President initiated a two-stage
plan of budget reform. The first phase,
“Funding Streams,” implemented in 2011-12, replaced the then-current, complicated
system of cross-subsidies and reallocation of various revenue streams from one campus
to another with a new framework that now leaves all revenues generated by a
campus—tuition, non-resident supplemental tuition, indirect cost returns, and
others—on that campus. Thus, campuses
directly receive the benefits from increased effort in generating these revenue
streams.
Funding streams dealt with all revenue streams except for
funds that come from the state. A second
reform—long overdue and a necessary companion to the first reform—has been
discussed since early 2011. Dubbed
“Rebenching,” it is designed to create greater transparency and equity in the
formula for distributing state funds across the campuses. Rebenching would replace the historical
allocation model, which simply applied shares of any annual augmentations or
cuts to the prior-year “base” budgets of the campuses, a process that was
followed for decades. Growth in student
numbers was funded differently depending on when it occurred, making it
important not only how much a campus has grown, but when it grew. The result of
this model is that state funding per student now varies significantly among the
campuses, and no one, including the Office of the President, can explain the
reasons for the disparities. Rebenching
aims to ensure that the education of a resident undergraduate (or any other
type of student) is supported by the same level of state funding, regardless of
campus, and to provide a transparent model that demonstrates the critical role
of state funding in preserving UC as a public institution.
In April 2011 the Office of the President assembled a
systemwide Rebenching Task Force that included at least one representative from
every campus, with several chancellors and other senior administrators, five
Academic Senate representatives, and several UCOP participants. Concluding its work in March 2012, the
Rebenching Task Force delayed the completion of its final report, with
recommendations and a supporting analysis in a spreadsheet, until last week
(June 21), although a draft had been circulating among administrators. It is clear that a systemwide review of the
report and recommendations cannot take place this year. Given the delayed communication, we are
distributing this “Guide to Rebenching” to summarize the recommendations made
by the Task Force, explain the principles or goals on which they are based, and
recommend some next steps.
What are the Rebenching
Task Force recommendations?
·
The
fundamental recommendation is to allocate state funds to the campuses on an
enrollment basis.
Several key principles, both academic and budgetary,
underlie this recommendation, most already proposed by the Academic Senate in
the Implementation Report (August 2011; see the hyperlink for the full
document). The state subsidy per student should
not depend on the campus the student attends, only the type of student; this
recommendation follows from our core value that UC is one university with one
standard of excellence at its ten campuses. The cost of a UC-quality education
is the same on every campus, and the campuses should be funded accordingly.
·
Per-student
funding will be distributed on a weighted basis by type of student
(undergraduate; master’s students, academic and professional; PhD students;
health sciences students).
Weightings recognize that it costs more to educate a doctoral or medical student than an undergraduate.
Weightings recognize that it costs more to educate a doctoral or medical student than an undergraduate.
Rebenching
will be implemented so as to bring all campuses up to the current highest level
of per-student funding, currently UCLA.
We note that this amount is estimated at $6413, which falls far below a reasonable estimate
of the subsidy needed to cover (along with tuition net of financial aid) the
actual cost of a UC education. This amount is derived from currently available
state funding divided by students on the campuses – thus it reflects the current
level of funding from the state, not any desired level of funding that would
achieve the level of quality to which UC aspires. The Task Force specifically chose to set its
target at the maximum level of per-student funding currently observed---already
inadequate---rather than an even less desirable outcome, such as moving
everyone to the current average per-student allocation. Additional details are provided in an
appendix below.
·
To
determine the total available state funding, selected units are funded “off the
top”.
Some of these off-the-top allocations reflect systemwide
priorities that have no relation to the number of students on the campuses
where those units reside—the Agricultural Experiment Station, Neuropsychiatric
Institutes, and Mental Health Teaching Support—as well as allocations to two
campuses, UC Merced and UC San Francisco.
Merced is an outlier due to its size, while San Francisco is an outlier
because it has no undergraduates. It is an open question as to how either
campus would fit into the same framework as the other eight campuses. Finally, $15M will be allocated to each campus
as a “fixed cost set-aside”.
·
The
transition to this new allocation model should occur over a six-year period,
using “new money,” that is, through increases in funding provided by the state,
rather than by redistributing current base budgets.
A majority of the Task Force preferred a fixed adjustment
period over delaying the process until sufficient new state funding was
available. However, in recognizing that alternatives need to be in place when
the budget is cut or flat, a second source of funding would be savings from
reducing allocations to systemwide units.
A third option would be reductions in allocations to the best-funded
campuses.
·
There
will be a penalty if a campus falls below its undergraduate resident targets.
As the Senate proposed, an undergraduate at one campus will
be allocated the same amount of state funding as an undergraduate on any other
campus; this funding would be provided only up to a
targeted enrollment; campuses receive tuition only for any students above their
targets. If a campus were to fall below its targeted enrollment of
resident undergraduates, it would give up the per-student allocation plus an
additional amount, currently suggested to be an additional 50% of the
per-student allocation. The mechanism recognizes the financial incentives
campuses have to enroll non-residents as a revenue source, the disproportionate
ability of campuses to attract non-residents, and the possibility that UC could
lose its capacity to accommodate all eligible residents as the number of
non-resident students grows. To address these incentives, and the need for
eligible residents displaced at one UC campus to be accommodated at another UC
campus, the Task Force proposes some sort of penalty; for instance, campuses
that fall more than 1% below their resident enrollment targets will lose state
funds at 150% of the per-student state fund allocation for each student below
the target. A provision such as the 1% margin
is intended to recognize that campuses cannot predict with certainty how many
students will accept offers of admission; allowing some margin, and perhaps
basing the calculation on a three-year moving average, avoids creating the
incentive to over-enroll, simply to reduce the chances of falling below an
enrollment target due to unexpectedly low rates of acceptance.
What still remains to
be done? [For a detailed list,
see Future Steps below.]
·
The recommendation
to enforce resident enrollment targets requires an updated UC long-range
enrollment plan that will be designed next year.
The success of rebenching rests on the development of a long-range enrollment plan, but little information about this plan has yet appeared. Therefore monitory the details and ensuring the timely completion of the enrollment plan will be critical.
The success of rebenching rests on the development of a long-range enrollment plan, but little information about this plan has yet appeared. Therefore monitory the details and ensuring the timely completion of the enrollment plan will be critical.
A full systemwide review of the rebenching report must be undertaken as early as possible in 2012-13.
On-going
assessment and review will be needed to ensure that rebenching outcomes are realized.
Conclusion
The principle of one student/one level of support has been putatively accepted by the Rebenching Task Force, but the delay in producing a report to be submitted to President Yudof and reviewed systemwide is alarming. The most destructive delaying tactic is the repeated objection, voiced by those who mischaracterize rebenching primarily as a policy of redistribution, that rebenching will be divisive, pitting haves against have-nots, the flagships versus foundering ships, and larger and older campuses versus the younger and smaller. These terms are simply synonyms for the fragmentation of the UC system by campus self-interest. By failing to enact rebenching in tandem with funding streams, the UC system would sustain the disparities in funding across the campuses that characterize the status quo, which President Yudof has publicly recognized as the outcome of a long history of ad hoc budgetary decisions.
Rebenching may also turn out to be the university's most significant response to the ongoing budget crisis of the last twenty years—and the single largest reform tool the university has in its direct control. The Rebenching recommendations are the best, and perhaps only, answer UCOP has to outside criticisms from the Bureau of State Audits last year and, more recently, to growing concern over privatization/non-resident students.
However, campus short-term self-interest may still trump the good of the system as a whole. The entire UC system stands to gain from facilitating the enrollment of additional non-resident students while still ensuring that the University enrolls resident students in numbers sufficient to meet UC’s obligations under the Master Plan. Without the enrollment-based mechanism for additional funding for campuses that take on those obligations, the University as a whole stands to lose, and risks further withdrawal by the state from its role in partnership with UC. Unfortunately, enacting the funding streams policy without rebenching has intensified the differences in campus self-generated revenues, and only strong leadership from the President can guarantee immediate implementation, successful completion, and ongoing oversight and assessment of the progress toward rebenching goals. Now is the time for the UC community to engage in open discussion and active support of the rebenching recommendations. The process of systemwide review, still undetermined, will be critical to the outcome of rebenching.
How exactly do the calculations
work?
First, a calculation of the weighted total enrollment on each campus is made, using targets,
not actual enrollments. A resident
undergraduate is assigned a weight of 1.0, as are professional Master’s and
academic Master’s students. Academic
PhDs are assigned a weight of 2.5 and Health Sciences professional school
students a weight of 5.0. A campus with
20,000 resident undergraduates, 2,000 PhDs, and 1,000 Health Sciences
professional school students would have an enrollment figure of 30,000. (Other categories are excluded only for
simplicity in illustration.)
The next step is needed only because we have not yet moved to a new
model. On each campus, a calculation of
per-student funding is made. Net state
funding, deducting off-the-top items from campus “base” budgets, is divided by
campus enrollment to calculate per-student funding. If the campus with 30,000 for its enrollment
figure had been receiving $150M in state funds, its per-student allocation
would be $5000. The campus with the
highest per-student allocation currently is UCLA, at $6413. (The Davis campus is slightly below UCLA, and
every other campus is below $6000.
Irvine and Santa Barbara are below $5000.) This amount becomes the
targeted per-student funding for every campus.
The long-run recommendation for the rebenching model is to bring each
campus up to the per-student allocation of $6413, first using new money, then
cuts to systemwide programs, if necessary, and finally, cuts to the best-funded
campuses, if necessary. The system would
need $222M to bring all campuses up to the UCLA figure, at current “budgeted
enrollments.” However, the rebenching
recommendations assume (and depend upon) an updated UC long-range enrollment
plan that will set new targets for 2013-14.
Allocations for 2012-13 will use the current shares of weighted enrollment,
using budgeted enrollments.
As long as a campus enrolls its targeted figure or more, for each
type of student, these funds are provided.
Students above target bring no additional state funding, only their
tuition net of return to aid.
Non-residents are included in every target except undergraduates, where
only California residents are included.
Finally, the Task Force recommends a penalty for falling below
target. When a campus falls below its
resident undergraduate target, for instance, it gives up the state funding
associated with that number of students, plus a penalty. One proposal is for the penalty to be the
return of an additional 50% of the per-student allocation, for each student
below the target. That amount could be
used to induce another campus to increase its target enrollment. Since campuses experience variation in their
“yield rates”, it is envisioned that something like a three-year moving average
be used for enrollments, and perhaps a 1% margin before state funds are
reduced.
Remaining Issues
1. We anticipate that the concept of a penalty will be
controversial and perhaps also misleading. The Senate anticipated that the
University would initially base funding on past campus enrollment targets, and
that campuses might seek to drop below those targets, in which case there would
be a need to address the amount of state funding they would give up as a
result; hence the penalty. A different problem may arise when the
campuses are free to propose new, and in some cases, lower targets in the
2012-13 process: the sum of nine campus targets may well fall short of the
number of resident students the University would like to enroll. Even
150% of $6413 is a relatively small penalty when compared to the non-resident
supplemental tuition received from displacing a resident undergraduate student
with a non-resident student. The
campuses stand to gain over $10,000 per student from such a substitution. If they displace a resident undergraduate who
is above the target, under the proposed model, they give up no state funding at
all. When the campuses propose target
enrollments, their aspirations for residents relative to non-residents may not
be compatible with the system’s overall target for resident
undergraduates. A higher “price” may be
needed to induce a campus to expand resident enrollments.
2. The
process for making allocations to UCM and UCSF is not yet settled. It is anticipated that they would share in
augmentations, and UCSF would share in cuts, but by a smaller percentage than
other campuses. The Rebenching report
includes a proposal for UCSF, but it was not reviewed by the Task Force
itself.
3. There
has been no review of the off-the-top amounts.
We anticipate that these will seem increasingly unaffordable, when judged
against the level of per-student state support that current funding permits.
4. The
proposal is to gradually bring the other campuses up to UCLA’s level of
per-student funding, over a six-year period.
With augmentations in state funding in each year, one option would be to
allocate 80% to the campuses based on enrollment shares; UCLA would participate
fully. The remaining 20% of the funding
could be allocated to those campuses with per-student funding below the highest
level. Each campus could receive 1/6 of its gap with respect to UCLA, or the
funding could differentially target the campuses that were further below the
highest level, in that year. The 20%
figure comes from a forecast for new state funding from earlier in the spring,
and the cost of allocating 1/6 of the amount needed to each campus. All of these figures are provisional. The Task Force favored a fixed adjustment
period of six years over the alternative of delaying the process, in the event
of cuts in state funding. In that case,
when cuts were allocated, they would, in effect, have to be allocated
differentially, to allocate the cuts proportionally, in one step, while also
bring the campuses closer together in the other. No specific examples have been modeled, nor
have offsetting actions been modeled---such as expanded non-resident
enrollments or tuition increases to replace additional reductions in state
funding.
5. These
weights may not be the best choices; they seem likely to draw criticism.
6. The
per-student allocation of $6413, when coupled with tuition net of
return-to-aid, falls well below what UC would say is a reasonable marginal or
average cost figure for delivering the curriculum at a level of quality that UC
seeks to maintain. The Senate had
advocated using a higher figure, along with a determination that a certain
percentage of students are unfunded, by our measure of costs. This model serves to allocate state funds
without such a calculation, but it should not suggest that costs are covered by
such a small per-student allocation.
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