Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Economic Crisis Impacting on Higher Education

I'm at a state university, and we're all waiting for the ax to fall, but hundreds of colleges across our nation are impacted in other ways, due to this economic disaster. (And this doesn't even take into account the lack of available student loans. SMH)

This is from an article in Chronicle of Higher Education, titled "Bank Freeze Leaves Hundreds of Colleges Cut Off from Short-Term Funds," by Kelly Field.

Wachovia bank has frozen the accounts of nearly 1,000 colleges, leaving institutions unable to access billions of dollars they depend on for salaries, campus construction, and debt payments.

The freeze, which affects most institutions that invest their endowment income and other assets through Commonfund, has some colleges worried that they won’t be able to make payroll this period, said Verne O. Sedlacek, president and chief executive of Commonfund, which manages investments for nonprofit institutions. Many colleges use the organization's short-term investment fund for operating expenses, “almost as a checking account,” he said.

As of last Friday, the Common Fund for Short Term Investments managed approximately $9.3-billion in assets for 900 colleges and roughly 100 private schools.

Wachovia, which agreed to sell its banking operations to Citigroup this week, announced on Monday that it was resigning as trustee of the fund and would allow plan participants to withdraw only 10 percent of their assets—the value of the securities that had reached maturity. That percentage grew to 26 percent on Tuesday as additional securities reached maturity, and is expected to reach 57 percent by the end of this year and 74 percent by the end of 2009.

But unless the credit markets thaw, enabling a new trustee to sell more of the short-term securities in the fund, colleges won’t be able to access all their money until at least 2010.



Read Article in Full (subscription to the Chronicle is needed.)

6 comments:

Ortho said...

The ax will fall hard on the many state universities in my state. I wonder which departments administrators will begin to trim first?

I'm sure at my university, Concrete University, humanities programs will feel the cuts first, and the hardest.

I wish you and your department the best of luck!

Mari-Djata said...

It is hilarious what racism can do. All of this started with bad housing loans and a hatred for Muslims. I can't say I am sad that this racist economy is tanking, but there will be a lot of causalties.

Yvette said...

If (like me!) you have allowed your CoHE on-line subscription to lapse, you can find a (FREE) story related to this topic on Inside Higher Ed: http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/10/02/economy

Anxious Black Woman said...

Thanks for sharing that link, yvette.

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