Fixing Trickle-Down Will Enable Us to Provide Universal Higher Education

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Introduction

Trickle-down economics—the belief that benefits given to the wealthy and corporations will “trickle down” to the rest of society—has dominated U.S. economic policy for over four decades. During this time, taxes on the richest Americans and largest companies have been repeatedly slashed, and public investment in services like education has stagnated or declined. Reversing this trend—“fixing trickle-down”—would restore the public revenue needed to provide universal higher education.


1. Trickle-Down Drains Public Funds

Trickle-down policies—like the 2017 Trump tax cuts—led to massive reductions in federal revenues, primarily benefiting the top 1%. The Roosevelt Institute argues that such tax codes “shrink the fiscal space available for investments in public goods” like education, healthcare, and infrastructure.

Restoring progressive taxation on high earners and corporations could generate hundreds of billions annually—enough to fund tuition-free college. For example, repealing the Trump tax cuts could raise over $2 trillion over 10 years (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities).


2. Education Is a Public Good, Not a Market Commodity

Trickle-down ideology treats education as an individual investment—purchased in a market—not as a public good. This leads to soaring tuition, student debt, and unequal access. Yet economic research shows that higher education yields broad public benefits, including economic growth, civic engagement, and social mobility.

According to a 2015 study by the OECD, public spending on higher education increases GDP per capita and reduces inequality (OECD Education Indicators). Universal college systems in countries like Germany, Finland, and Denmark have proven this model works—because they rejected trickle-down and embraced progressive taxation.


3. Fixing Trickle-Down Expands Access Through Progressive Taxes

Progressive tax systems directly redistribute income and enable investment in universal education systems. A study published by the International Labour Organization found that increased public revenue through progressive taxation allows governments to fund universal access to schools and universities (ILO Working Paper, 2020).

Compare this to the United States, where tuition at public colleges has risen 213% in 30 years (adjusted for inflation) while state funding per student has dropped (College Board). Reversing that trend depends on rebuilding the tax base undermined by trickle-down policies.


4. It’s Already Been Done Before

Universal higher education is not a fantasy—it’s a return to what the U.S. once offered. After World War II, the G.I. Bill funded free college for millions, fueling one of the most productive decades in U.S. history. That era was also marked by much higher marginal tax rates on the wealthy—up to 91%—which paid for public universities and infrastructure.

As former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich explains: “We once financed higher education through taxes on those who could most afford it. Reversing trickle-down economics would let us do it again.”


5. Universal Higher Education Is Affordable—If We Fix the System

The U.S. could provide free public college for all students at an estimated cost of $79 billion/year (Urban Institute). That’s less than what the federal government spends annually on tax breaks for the top 1%—a result of trickle-down ideology.

Fixing trickle-down would redirect those public funds toward investments that benefit everyone, not just the wealthy few.


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Conclusion

Fixing trickle-down economics—through fairer taxes and rejecting the failed logic of wealth “trickling down”—would create the fiscal and moral foundation for universal higher education. Doing so would restore public revenue, increase access, and help build a fairer society in which opportunity is a right, not a privilege.


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