"Despite so many fat years, universities have done little until recently
to improve the courses they offer. University spending is driven by the
need to compete in university league tables that tend to rank almost
everything about a university except the (hard-to-measure) quality of
the graduates it produces. Roger Geiger and Donald Heller of
Pennsylvania State University say that since 1990, in both public and
private colleges, expenditures on instruction have risen more slowly
than in any other category of spending, even as student numbers have
risen. Universities are, however, spending plenty more on administration
and support services."