Monday, May 12, 2025
This paper deals with the trade-off between labor and capital. For the purposes of this paper, labor is defined as compensation (pay and benefits), and capital is defined as plant, equipment, and land assets. In addition, this paper is interested in the trade-off between labor (faculty) and capital (technology). The economic trade-off model suggests the following general rules:
The following table illustrates the current trade-off between compensation and plant. Compensation is a proxy for faculty because of how IPEDS classifies its data.[1] Since IPEDs does not clearly separate faculty compensation or technology, the data uses total compensation and plant, equipment, and material as proxies for labor and capital goods. The table uses a ratio of total compensation to total plant by year.
Starting in 2020, colleges invested more funds in capital goods (plant, etc.) than in labor (compensation). The ratio between compensation and plant[2] fell to its lowest in 2021. The low point occurred during the COVID pandemic in 2021, when colleges made large purchases of technology for faculty and students so that instruction could continue during the pandemic. In 2022, the trade-off began to reverse as colleges either reduced or increased investment in faculty or reduced investment in technology.
The slope of the quadratic equation suggests that the trade-off favored labor after 2022. Whether the claims about the value of AI will reverse the trend will have to be seen.
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[1] Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS)
[2] See Chart
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