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Wisconsin financial aid declines

Total state financial aid to college and university students in Wisconsin has lagged or declined in the last decade, leaving students to shoulder more of the cost of education – and undermining a tool to stem the state’s higher education enrollment declines and workforce challenges.

Wisconsin has not prioritized financial aid programs in recent state budgets, according to a recent, in-depth Wisconsin Policy Forum report. Instead, state leaders’ college affordability efforts have focused on maintaining a tuition freeze for the University of Wisconsin System.

This approach holds down costs for all UW students but does not target those most in need, or help technical or private college students.

Key report findings include:

n State spending on grants, loans, and scholarships to undergraduate students grew rapidly from 2000 to 2011 but fell 0.5 percent between 2011 and 2021, without adjusting for inflation.

Even adjusted for inflation, the average unmet need for in-state undergraduates receiving financial aid at all higher education institutions in Wisconsin has grown 135.6 percent from $3,755 in 2000 to $8,845 in 2021.

n The average Wisconsin Grant and federal Pell Grant combined paid for 91.4 percent of in-state undergraduate tuition at UW-Madison in 2002 but only 69 percent in 2021.

n Wisconsin’s 2020 spending on grants to undergraduates worked out to $541 per student, 44.8 percent lower than the national average of nearly $980 per undergraduate.

n Wisconsin’s total grant aid to undergraduates increased from $107.2 million in 2010 to $120.9 million in 2020, or 12.8 percent. That was 36th among the 50 states. Nationally, grant aid increased by 46 percent, or more than three-and-a-half times as much.

Studies point to financial aid making students more likely to enroll and remain in, and graduate from, college. Such outcomes are crucial as Wisconsin faces workforce shortages in key sectors — and as enrollment in its colleges and universities has declined more than nationally.

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