Tuition going up at Mississippi universities. Here's what students will have to pay.

Jeff Amy
Associated Press
  • In-state tuition will have risen 71% from fall 2009 to fall 2019.
  • Typical borrower graduating with more than $30,000 in debt.
  • See breakdown of increases by school.

JACKSON, Miss. — Mississippi's eight public universities plan to raise tuition by an average of 4% next fall, saying state funding increases this year are earmarked for increasing employee costs and they need more money to maintain programs.

The College Board on Thursday gave final approval to tuition increases at all of the universities, waiving the normal procedure in which trustees would vote again later.

The statewide average for two semesters of full-time tuition and fees will rise by an average of $312 to $8,120 for in-state undergraduates. Increases range from 8.4% at Mississippi University for Women to 1.9% at the University of Mississippi.

"I guess I'll get another job," said Larry Sykes, a Jackson State University senior who's on track to graduate in December. The Clarksdale native and business major says he's paying for school out of job earnings and savings and will have to foot the bill for the university's 4.9 percent increase.

At MUW, freshman speech pathology major Aja Hudson told The Commercial Dispatch that she relies on her family for support.

"For some people that don't have a lot of money, this will be a big impact, but for those that have scholarships, they'll be OK," Hudson said. "I'm not on a scholarship though, so I guess my mom will have to pay (the increase)."

Stefan Young, left, a senior accounting major, and Beronique Martin, a junior chemistry major, right, listen  Thursday, April 18, 2019,  as Larry Sykes, a Jackson State University senior majoring in business administration, stands outside Alexander Hall, and expresses his displeasure with the College Board raising tuition at all of the state's public universities for the fall. Sykes works so he can pay his own tuition. Mississippi's eight public universities plan to raise tuition by an average of 4% next fall, saying state funding increases this year are earmarked for increasing employee costs and they need more money to maintain programs.

Universities are scheduled to get $38 million more in state money in the 2020 budget year beginning July 1 than last year. Most of that 5.6% increase will be spent on mandated increases for employee raises, pensions and health insurance costs, though. The increase is a partial recovery from sharp cuts in state appropriations made in 2017 and 2018, but overall state spending on universities remains almost 6% below where it was in 2016.

MUW President Nora Miller said the listed 8.4% increase at her institution is deceptive because the university is abolishing online course fees students were already paying and instead rolling them into tuition.

"Students will really be paying 3% more than what they have been paying," Miller said.

At Delta State University, which is increasing tuition and fees by 5.9%, President Bill LaForge said the university operates on a tight margin and could have faced program cuts without the increase.

"It's a modest amount but it also keeps us very competitive with our sister institutions in the state and the midsouth," LaForge said. "Without that, we would have had to go in and cut a professorship or a program somewhere."

Tuition will also rise for out-of-state students and at professional schools. At four universities — Delta State, MUW, Mississippi Valley State University and Alcorn State University — undergraduates from outside Mississippi pay the in-state rate as a way to recruit more out-of-state students. Jackson State is dropping its out-of-state tuition to $1,000 more than the in-state rate, while the University of Southern Mississippi already charges $2,000 above the in-state rate.

Nearly 80% of Mississippi students don't pay the sticker price, thanks to federal, state and college-based aid. In 2016-2017, Mississippi university undergraduates typically got around $8,000 worth of aid, federal figures show. That covered about one-third of the total cost of attendance for on-campus students, including, tuition, room and board, books and transportation.

However, rising college costs are far outstripping stagnant family incomes. In-state tuition will have risen 71% from fall 2009 to fall 2019, while the typical Mississippi family's yearly income has risen about 25% during that time. It now takes more than 17% of a typical family's yearly income to pay the full price of tuition at a Mississippi public university.

More students are borrowing to pay for school. The Institute for College Access and Success reports 58% of graduates from the state's public and private universities had debt when they collected a diploma in 2017, with the typical borrower graduating with more than $30,000 in debt.

List of tuition and fees at Mississippi universities

Here’s a look at tuition and fees for two semesters (fall and spring), as well as the percentage change from the current academic year:

  • Alcorn State University: $7,327, up 3%; includes $30 activities fee.
  • Delta State University: $7,671, up 5.9%; includes $120 facilities fee and $50 activities fee.
  • Jackson State University: $8,445, up 4.9%; includes $105 facilities fee and $70 activities fee.
  • Mississippi State University: $8,910, up 3%; includes $100 facilities fee and $10 activities fee.
  • Mississippi University for Women: $7,525, up 8.4%; includes $100 facilities fee.
  • Mississippi Valley State University: $6,746, up 3%; includes $20 activities fee.
  • University of Mississippi: $8,828, up 1.9%; includes $100 facilities fee and $10 activities fee.
  • University of Mississippi Medical Center: $8,728, up 3.5%.
  • University of Southern Mississippi: $8,896, up 3.2%; includes $70 facilities fee and $40 activities fee.

Source: Mississippi College Board.

Update: This story has been updated since first published to correct the University of Mississippi tuition and fee increase.