Administrative growth and executive compensation are perennial hot-button issues for students, labor leaders and fiscal watchdogs, who say they are emblematic of the system's free-spending ways. UC officials counter that the costs are necessary to compete with other world-class institutions and keep up with advancing technology and growing enrollment.
They also say the budget numbers can give the wrong impression.
Only about a quarter of the UC system's budget is made up of "core fund" spending on the educational mission, they point out. The remainder encompasses everything else, including five medical centers that are more than self-supporting and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which helps bring in the billions of dollars in government grants and contracts that UC researchers attract each year.
Indeed, UC's budget - larger than those of some 25 states - is so big and so complex that it can be puzzling even for experts.
Education, politics, and anything else that catches my attention.
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Yes. Next Question.
Is the University of California spending too little on teaching and too much on administration?
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