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Small Town, Big Overhead: Rural–Urban Differences in Administrative Cost per Student

Kallen Zhou

No z8ywa_v1, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science

Abstract: Current literature on rural higher education institutions (HEIs) acknowledges the role they play in their communities, providing post-secondary education access and contributions to their local economies. Additionally, administrative bloat has been commonly defined as the increase in non-instructional spending. However, these analyses rarely considered how rurality can affect administrative bloat. Applying economic theories such as Resource Dependency Theory and diseconomies of scale, this study pairs a theoretical framework with quantitative analyses to investigate whether rural HEIs face larger growth in their administrative spending compared to their urban counterparts. Using IPEDS panel data (2006–2023), inflation-adjusted administrative spending per student, and a rural/urban classification based on IPEDS locale codes, this study combines descriptive comparisons, Welch’s unequal-variance t-tests, and a comparative interrupted time series design around the year 2011, a major federal compliance inflection point for higher education. The results indicate a statistically significant post-2011 rural-relative slope increase of approximately $174 per student per year in administrative spending compared to urban institutions (p = 0.033), indicating rural HEIs may face greater administrative bloat following heightened compliance demands. These findings suggest that rural HEIs may face disproportionate financial strain which could crowd out student investments and community engagement.

Date: 2026-06-25
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:z8ywa_v1

DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/z8ywa_v1

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