What to Make of the Wave of College Closures

Closures are rising as demographic decline and financial pressures take hold.

Since I began studying higher education, college closures have gone from rare to common. How common are they? Why did this change happen? Is it good or bad?

How Many Colleges are Closing?

The first noteworthy point is that we don’t have a good handle on how many college closures there have been. Part of the issue is disagreement over what counts as a closure. If a small branch campus closes, does that count? What about when one college merges with another? Some databases exclude for-profits, while others include them. As a result, we are left with radically different numbers depending on the source used. Higher Ed Dive maintains the most up-to-date running count of closures, reporting around 145 closures from 2016 to the present. The Hechinger Report used to track closures but stopped a couple of years ago; it reported 213 closures from 2016 to 2024. Meanwhile, the Department of Education’s Digest of Education Statistics reports that 236 colleges closed in 2018–19 alone. The bottom line is that the number of college closures depends on the data source used, but all sources indicate a substantial number of closures in recent years.

What’s Driving the Closures?

There are two leading theories on what’s driving college closures.

The first is disruptive innovation. Under disruptive innovation, large, successful incumbents rest on their laurels and avoid niche, unprofitable markets. But innovative and agile startups, unencumbered by legacy costs and thinking, can often find profit in those niche markets and grow and innovate, and eventually their products pose a threat to the original incumbents. The classic example is how IBM neglected the personal computer to focus on the market for mainframe computers, where they were dominant, but saw their market share erode as personal computers became more capable and prevalent.

In the higher education context, the leading proponents of this view are Clayton Christensen, who predicted that half of colleges would close, and his protégé Michael Horn, who, with Christensen, predicted that “the bottom 25% of every tier, we predict, will disappear or merge in the next 10 to 15 years.” Their critics argue that this will not happen, but Christensen and Horn are more correct than their critics give them credit for.

Focusing specifically on the prediction, in 2013, when they made it, there were 4,724 degree-granting institutions. From 2013–14 to 2022–23, 726 have closed. That amounts to about 15 percent, with another six years of closures still to count. If closures over the next six years match the average rate since their prediction, then about 24.6 percent of colleges will have closed.

However, most of these closures are not what we would typically think of as closures. For example, only four public colleges have closed since their prediction, and the vast majority of closures have been among for-profit institutions. On the other hand, this fails to give Christensen and Horn enough credit. When they made their prediction, college closures were pretty rare, with around 15 closures per year in the decade prior. They predicted more, and lo and behold, the closure rate almost quintupled to over 70 per year since their prediction.

But while their predication is on track, I am a bit skeptical of the underlying mechanism. In the disruptive innovation story, it is new and innovative firms that emerge to displace the incumbents. But I don’t see new and innovative colleges driving the story here. There has been some innovation, notably the online models employed by Southern New Hampshire University and similar colleges, and modifications to traditional colleges, such as at Arizona State University. But these are slight changes to the traditional model rather than an entirely new and disruptive model.  

The main alternative explanation for the surge in college closures is a shrinking pool of students. Undergraduate student enrollment peaked in 2010 at just over 18 million students. Next year, it is projected to be 16.7 million. With fewer students, many marginally viable colleges can become unviable.

Are the Closures Good or Bad?

College closures have both good and bad aspects. On the negative side are the effects on students and employees of the closed colleges. Many students’ educational plans are derailed entirely when their college closes, and even those who can transfer to a different college face the usual personal and academic difficulties of transferring. Employees at closed colleges also suffer.

But closures are generally positive for society as a whole. These colleges aren’t failing randomly, but because their costs are exceeding their revenue. Joseph Schumpeter coined the term creative destruction to describe how the closure of unprofitable firms frees up labor, physical capital, and financial capital for more productive uses. Creative destruction is the price we pay for progress. In the college context, when a struggling college closes, that means the college’s buildings are available for other uses, the old staff find other jobs, and students attend colleges that are more likely to set them up for success. The transition is painful, and those costs are borne almost entirely by the existing staff and student population. But once those costs are endured, the new normal is both more valuable and more sustainable for future students and staff. Read (“Vedder’s Case for Creative Destruction.”)

Efforts to ease the transition, particularly facilitating transfers from closing colleges to remaining colleges, are welcome. But indiscriminate efforts to save closing colleges would just delay the inevitable and would prevent students, staff, and capital from being used in better ways.  

Follow Andrew Gillen on X.

  1. Check out YouTube, Khan Academy and a host of other online training resources. Education in a host of fields no longer requires going to college.

    For instance, once upon a time a Tolkien fan might decide to study Nordic languages, history and myths in college. That was the only way to do it. Now they can find the training they want online for little or nothing and taught by a former professor.

    https://www.youtube.com/@JacksonCrawford

    The fields that will survive as college majors are those where being self-taught is difficult and formal credentials required. Those include engineering, medicine and nursing.

    1. Actually, engineering, medicine, and nursing used to be taught through apprenticeships.

      Nursing is the best example because nurses were once trained by the hospitals in which they worked, it was mostly a hands-on apprenticeship of learning by doing while being supervised.

      While Harvard Med was founded in 1782, a lot of doctors learned medicine from their fathers, and this extended into the 20th century.

      Engineering actually evolved out of the carnage of the 19th century railroads, eventually it was the senior railroad people who had figured out how to building safely that wrote the specs and taught the junior people how to do it.

      Take Jimmy Carter, who was a nuclear engineer in the US Navy, while he had an Annapolis degree, they didn’t teach nuclear engineering back then. Everything he learned, he learned as one of Rickover‘s apprentices.

    2. And the former professor has an audience that is genuinely interested in the topic, not for the grade or meet a graduation requirement, but for a genuine interest in learning about the topic.

      In an earlier era, i.e. a century ago when professors were not paid very well, professors became professors because of their love of the topic, knowing that they could make more money doing most anything else. There was a time when it was an open secret that Harvard paid considerably less than comparable institutions because people would sacrifice to be able to teach at Harvard, to teach what they loved.

      And now we have Claudine Gay, a known plagiarist, being paid $900,000 a year to teach a McCourse in something. It ain’t about education anymore, and it definitely ain’t about a love of knowledge anymore….

  2. Problems here. I’ll just mention two.

    First, the idea that “college closures are generally positive for society” makes sense in only the most narrow-minded, reductionistic way. The closing of colleges suggests that what colleges are offering (and, with rare exceptions, they don’t vary that much) is not meeting needs and wants; what we should want is for colleges to succeed, not to close. (Unless you go with the argument that fewer people should go to college, which can be argued for, but isn’t explicitly advanced in the article.)

    This gets to the general misguided celebration of “creative destruction.”

    Second, “The classic example is how IBM neglected the personal computer to focus on the market for mainframe computers” I know this isn’t the subject of the article, but this claim is just plain factually false, and it is not “the classic example” of anything. IBM created the DOS-based PC, and was initially a leading brand (perhaps the leading brand) of them. Later, IBM created the ThinkPad, which was, and remains, among the most highly acclaimed and successful laptop brands. Whatever IBM’s problems have been (and I don’t know the answer to that), neglecting the personal computer to focus on mainframes certainly wasn’t one of them.

    An actual classic example regarding IBM is them giving DOS away to their tiny contractor MicroSoft, thinking that all the money was in hardware, not software.

    1. Universities were handed the keys to the kingdom and they were found wanting in the extreme. Loss of nonprofit status might get their attention since money is about all they care about at this point.

      1. It was Lyndon Johnson’s decision in 1967 to move the US Mail to trucks and airplanes, and to eliminate the railroad post offices that did in the railroads.

        Hauling the mail and hauling these RPOs that sorted the mail provided the subsidy that supported not only otherwise money-losing passenger routes, but the railroads themselves.

        The same thing is true now, much of higher education would implode if the subsidies ended.

  3. The finding that most of the schools that have closed were tax-paying (for-profit) schools isn’t surprising, nor is it a surprise that so few public schools have closed. Legislators love their state-supported schools. It is nearly impossible for a public school to have to close, given the support they get and the lack of accountability they face. If those schools had to charge tuition based on real costs, and were not supported by land grants, not paying taxes, generous State scholarships, etc. they’d all close.

  4. My guess. After years of awarding worthless degrees, devoid of any hope of a career or loan pay back, the word is getting out. Some much touted degree paths are worthless. EGS, DEI, spring breaks and activism hits reality but only after graduation. Some 40% of incoming freshmen do not have the background to succeed but do have the money, for a while, then flunk out. PhD professors, at best, can only land part time work, as full time Administrative types have metastasized the payrolls. We paid dummies and the bill is now due and payable.
    So go somewhere else.

  5. Still known as “whip city“, Westfield, MA was the premier manufacturer a buggy whips in the 19th century. Likewise. the “toy town“ of Winchendon, MA was known for the manufacturer of wooden toys in the era before plastic.

    What’s happening to higher education right now is not creative destruction in that there aren’t niche markets of students able and wanting to attend college.

    Instead, what we’re seeing is a collapse of a market. It’s not just demographics, we also are seeing a decline in the percentage of the 18 year-old cohort that both wants to go to college and is actually attending. With the exception of the depression and war time, this is the first time in American history that college attendance is a percentage of the population is actually declining.

    The lies —and they are lies — aren’t working anymore. The generic college degree, in anything, stopped being the ticket to a good job about 1978. Since then, college was more of a gamble than anything else and now the odds at the casino are probably better.

    It needs to remembered that their parents are the Gen X generation, the generation that fully believed that the myth of the college degree was still true and sadly learned that it wasn’t. So now with relatively useless college agrees of their own, they’re gonna spend money they don’t have so that children can work at Starbucks?

    No, they’re gonna get their son onto the fire department or into a trade. That’s where the money is in the 21st century, not with the letters after your name, and everyone knows it.

    Remember too there’s a true demographic drop doesn’t hit until this fall, and I suspect there’s a lot of colleges that won’t be here in two years let alone six.
    And what will be even more interesting is what happens to the newly unemployed faculty and staff, many of whom I don’t think have the ability to find employment in anything else — only in higher education, can you treat your customers the way most institutions treat their students. Only in higher education, can you have the nonchalant attitude towards work and expect to get paid, and to get paid well.

    No, what we’re going to see happening to the college towns is what has already happened to the Milltown‘s in places like Maine. Those able to retire early will do so and manage to get by on a reduced pension. Those with ambition woll move away, those without will ascend into social dysfunction. And if you think these communities have a drug problem now, you ain’t seen nothing yet.

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