Hearing Recap: “No More Surprises: Reforming College Pricing for Students and Families”
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
September 16, 2025
Today, the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development held a hearing to examine ways to make college costs more transparent.
![]() Witnesses shared how college pricing can be confusing and how families are demanding more transparency. ![]() ![]() Chairman Tim Walberg (R-MI) discussed state funding in higher education with Dr. Andrew Gillen, Research Fellow at the Cato Institute. “I do disagree with the premise that state funding has been on a long downward trajectory—this is often called state disinvestment. A couple months ago we put out a report that documented the last four and a half decades of state funding for higher education and when you look at the trend line it’s actually gone up. So, states have been increasing funding over time by about $56 per-student, per-year,” Dr. Gillen said. ![]() Rep. Mark Harris (R-NC) asked about “unfunded discounts” and how this system is a scheme. “[The high achieving student is] unwittingly getting their scholarship funded most likely by a classmate—maybe his or her roommate. The loser in this is the roommate that may be a B student, and she doesn’t know that she’s paying… $10,000 or $15,000 a year for her roommate’s scholarship. She may be borrowing that money—racking up $40,000 or $50,000 in debt,” explained Mr. Lee S. Wishing III, Vice President for Student Recruitment and Chief Marketing Officer at Grove City College. ![]() Bottom line: Confusion around college costs leads to students blindly overborrowing, dropping out, or deciding not to enroll in the first place. Committee Republicans are working to increase transparency so that students and families can make the decision that’s best for them when it comes to higher education. |