U.S. undergraduate enrollment has fallen 12% since 2010, with two‑year colleges down 39%, and the shrinking pipeline of young people means fewer students even if college costs improve. The author argues this will hollow out college‑dependent towns, creating a 'Second Rust Belt' as 'education mills' contract. Managing the fallout will require proactive regional transition plans, not just campus fixes.
— It reframes higher‑education debates as a demographic and regional‑economy challenge, warning policymakers to plan for post‑college‑town futures.
kyla scanlon
2025.10.10
100% relevant
Western Kentucky University as a case study; NCES figures on enrollment decline (12% overall, two‑year colleges from 7.7m to 4.7m).
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