By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, April 25, 2025
Harvard University and Hillsdale College have a lot more
in common than you might expect: Both are home to many good and serious
students and faculty, neither is very much like the cartoon of itself outsiders
see, and they both have the one big important thing that kept Donald Regan from
getting bossed around by Nancy Reagan—it is, after all, to Ronald Reagan’s
irascible treasury secretary that we reportedly owe the popularization of the
term “f—k-you money.”
“Why does Harvard need such a big endowment?” people used
to ask. “Why is Hillsdale so insistent about not taking government money?”
others demanded.
Now you know.
Harvard’s endowment was right around $64 billion at last
count, equal to about 10 years of the school’s operating expenses. Those
investments produce billions of dollars in income for the university, which
uses some of the proceeds for operating expenses and reinvests the rest.
Endowment income is Harvard’s largest source of
revenue. It’s a little complicated, of course: Harvard’s “endowment” isn’t a
fund but some 14,000 individual funds, most of which are restricted to certain
uses in certain programs. But it is a big pile of money, and there’s a great
big stream of revenue from tuition and other sources, too.
It is not that Harvard isn’t going to miss the $2.2
billion in grants and contracts the Trump administration has frozen on
account of … pretexts for its pique and resentment and vindictiveness. But
Harvard can adapt. So can Yale University ($41 billion) Stanford University
($36 billion), Princeton University ($33 billion), and the University of
Pennsylvania ($21 billion), etc.
Hillsdale does things a little differently. It has a
respectable endowment, too, right around $1 billion. Tuition represents a
relatively small share of its revenue; instead, the school has developed real
proficiency at fund-raising and generating its own income over the years.
Hillsdale has a reputation for conservatism, but conservatism is a slippery
thing: Hillsdale was open to black and female students from its founding in
1844 (doing so was part of the point of its founding as a Christian college) whereas
Harvard didn’t graduate its first African Americans until a generation later
and didn’t admit female undergraduates until the 1970s. I taught a seminar at
Hillsdale a few years back, and I was surprised (and pleased) to learn that
while there were a lot more young people walking around with pictures of
Margaret Thatcher there than at the typical campus, that was a minority
enthusiasm, while most of the students were there to learn history and read
philosophy and to be, in a word, educated.
What Hillsdale’s independence from government funding has
enabled is not conservatism or sectarianism but independence. Does that
sound good to anybody else right now? And by anybody, I mean anybody
sitting in a university’s president’s office.
There’s an old story about two brothers, one an alcoholic
and the other a teetotaler. The alcoholic explains himself: “My father was a
drunk. My grandfather was a drunk. All my uncles were drunks. What choice did I
have?” And the teetotaler explains himself: “My father was a drunk. My
grandfather was a drunk. All my uncles were drunks. What choice did I have?”
Hillsdale is a teetotaler when it comes to government money, but other
institutions may be getting the message that it is time to sober up.
They should take advantage of the moment.
It is easy to find a lot of inane, insane, or
counterproductive stuff being done with public money at universities. (There’s
a whole weird little galaxy of right-wing media that employs telegenic
22-year-olds to do almost nothing else.) On the other hand, university-based
(and most often government-supported) work in “basic science”—pure research
into the fundamental questions—is an excellent use of the modest public
resources involved. And, yes, the resources are modest: A typical year’s
worth of federal
support of basic science amounts to about 11 days of Social Security
spending.
A smart political hustler, understanding that the road
from pure research to commercialization is not as long and winding today as it
was a generation ago, might propose some modest entitlement reform, using most
of the savings for deficit-reduction but kicking in enough to, say, triple
federal funding for basic science, which could have real benefits for the areas
in which the United States actually excels, which isn’t 20th-century
manufacturing but cutting-edge information technology, pharmaceuticals and life
sciences, other medical technologies, aerospace, robotics, energy, agriculture,
etc. The graduate students and captains of industry you’d bring into your camp
may not be a huge voting bloc, but Americans have, historically, enjoyed living
in the country that keeps inventing the future, and we had a pretty good run of
it from the Manhattan Project through the birth of the Internet.
Unfortunately, our current generation of political
hustlers is peopled by those who aren’t even smart enough to see the most
obvious kinds of opportunity.
There is much to be said for government support of
university research, as the Pentagon
and NASA et al. have known
for a long time. The case against the universities is the same as the case
against other elite institutions: They are too fat and lazy, too smug and
self-satisfied, too insulated from market pressures and democratic
accountability, too keen on niche enthusiasms and voguish ideological
jihads—too far removed from the people they are supposed to serve and the
people who pay the taxes that support so much of their work. That case often is
overstated, but it does not come out of nowhere, and it is not entirely without
merit.
Harvard has an opportunity to set an example, to refocus
itself on its most worthwhile work and to do a little pruning of the unfruitful
and the meretricious. And maybe make a little bit of a show out of it—and drive
home the point. Other universities—the ones that do not have Harvard’s
resources—would benefit from Harvard’s taking the lead. Government money is
always going to come with political strings, but there are better and worse
ways to play the politics, and Harvard has enough in its rainy-day funds to
enjoy some flexibility: Thanks to its endowment, Harvard doesn’t have to kowtow
to this administration or to the next one. But the moment does call for action:
This is one of those cases where good policy is good politics: Husbanding
university resources more prudently would be a better practice and would also
assuage some of the populist irritation that has made a political target of
higher education.
Sure, there will be some howls down at the sundry
grievance-studies departments, but what’s the point of having “f—k-you” money
if you never say the words and do the thing?
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