America’s universities were once seen as vehicles for social mobility: when veterans returned home from World War II, the newly enacted GI Bill compensated millions with paid college and vocational school tuition. However, universities today are perceived as bloated and expensive, which has contributed to a loss of public trust, and have become battlegrounds for controversial culture wars. Some in the policy community would like significant cuts to university subsidies. A big battle is looming over the future of American universities.

To shed some light on what this future might look like, Capitalisn’t hosts Bethany McLean and Luigi Zingales are joined by University of Chicago historian Hanna Gray, who served as president of the university from 1978 to 1993—a period marked by immensely challenging debates on free speech, financial constraints, and leadership decisions. Gray has written that the creation of the modern university “rested on a faith, pervasive in the post-war world, and the potential for education to create a better world, to produce both social mobility and a meritocratic society that would realize the true promise of democracy.” In this episode, she offers insights into whether this promise is more unkept than kept and if faith will be enough for the modern university system to survive.


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