Ivy League universities, including the University of Pennsylvania, Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth College, and Yale, have surpassed a significant milestone in tuition costs, now charging more than $90,000 a year. This development is part of a broader trend in elite college education becoming increasingly unaffordable, with some institutions nearing the $100,000-a-year mark. A private university has already reached this threshold, presenting students with the prospect of a $400,000 degree. Financial experts and columnists like Ron Lieber are raising concerns over the sustainability of these soaring costs, with a dozen other colleges expected to reach similar figures soon.
Some colleges will soon charge $100,000 a year. Our financial columnist Ron Lieber looks into how it happened. https://t.co/2ZIAXjuzkA
How college got so expensive https://t.co/CuPKUbcUno
Welcome to the $100,000-A-YEAR degree! Students at a private university face a $400,000 degree for the first time - with experts warning a dozen other colleges are close to hitting the eye-watering total too https://t.co/1hYUTrjqId https://t.co/peQaaSAEaQ
Ivy League College Costs Soar to More Than $90,000 a Year - Bloomberg
Ivy League College Costs Soar to More Than $90,000 a Year https://t.co/VGDbAoQlen
Want to study at an Ivy League university? That’ll be $90,000 a year. University of Pennsylvania, Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth College and Yale surpass milestone amid elite college ‘affordability crisis’ ⬇️ https://t.co/djz4SxaMIq