
Re: Schieffler DA Jr, Azevedo BM, Culbertson RA, Kahn MJ. Financial implications of increasing medical school class size: does tuition cover cost? Perm J 2012 Spring;16(2):10–4. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/11-144 Toffler WL. Medical education—the challenge of distinguishing actual costs versus charges (tuition). Perm J 2012 Spring;16(2):73–4. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/12-026
To the Editor,
During the last 50 years or more the cost of an undergraduate college education has consistently grown at a rate that exceeded inflation. Some potentially contributory factors include the decreased time commitment of the average college professor to classroom teaching as research activities became more important to career advancement and the variety of subsidies, such as college loan programs, work-study arrangements, etc, that partially insulate the process from true economic market forces. Given the perceived value of a college education, there has been little pressure for colleges to be truly competitive on pricing for their students. Most economists will agree that if something is subsidized one tends to get more of it. One has to assume these same forces are also part of the rising cost of medical school. It is hard to tell if this article took that perspective into account or started with the underlying presumption that the present medical school cost structure was appropriate. As long as classes are filled and the admission process is so competitive, there is little incentive for schools to seriously address their cost structure and faculty time commitments.

