Title: New Hampshire Trends, Higher Education and the State Budget
1 New Hampshire Trends, Higher Education and the
State Budget
Community Colleges of New Hampshire
Steve Norton Executive Director NH Center for
Public Policy Studies May 19th, 2008
to raise new ideas and improve policy debates
through quality information and analysis on
issues shaping New Hampshires future.
2Macro Trends
- Aging
- People are getting older, fewer children
- Economic Change
- Agriculture -gt Manufacturing -gt ?
- The World is Flat
- Information, Communication, Transportation
- Environmental Change
- Climate, Water, Conservation
- Migration
- Role of Towns in Shaping New Hampshire
3Age Distribution 1970
4Age Distribution 1995
5Age Distribution 2020?
6Health Care (not high income jobs) Accounts for
Much of Projected Job Growth
Source NH Department of Labor Projections
7Mt Washington Valley
The Lakes Region
The North Country
What is NH?
The Seacoast
The Capital Region
The Monadnock Region
The Tech Corridor?
8Geographic Variation What Do Regions Have in
Common?
Source NH Office of State Planning Estimates
9Proportion of Population Over the Age of 65
Dramatically Changing
10Where did the money go?
11What about purchasing power has it increased?
12Feast and Famine 1997-2007 Change in General
Fund Appropriations (in 2007 per capita)
11
13Changes in General Fund Contributions (Education
Related)
14A Convergence of trends .
- Over the past decade ? a decline, in real terms,
in states participation in higher education in
the state. - Economic recession ? Increases competition for
state general funds. - Aging ? Declining number of children graduating
from high school ? Increased competition for
college students. - State budget conversations will impact ongoing
state support (retirement, education adequacy). - Independence of community colleges system will
likely require initial support.
15May lead to tough decisions
- Engage with business community etc in a broader
conversation about need to invest in higher
education? - Recruit and enroll students who would not have
previously gone to college? - Increase tuition rates faster than in recent
years? - Reduce faculty and programs?
16All of our reportsare available on the
webwww.nhpolicy.org
New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies
Board of Directors Donna Sytek, Chair John B.
Andrews John D. Crosier Shelia T. Francoeur Chuck
Morse Todd Selig Stuart Smith James
Tibbetts Brian Walsh Kimon S. Zachos Martin
Gross Staff Steve Norton Dennis Delay Ryan Tappin
to raise new ideas and improve policy debates
through quality information and analysis on
issues shaping New Hampshires future.