This book identifies the causes of rising college tuitions. It
identifies a system of policies, practices, and regulations that have
converted higher education into an inefficient system that serves the
interest of the tenured class and professional educators over that of
the students. Using statistics, analysis, and examples, the author
identifies and names the culprit behind these tuition increases as
structural and cultural liberalism, all of which has created a tax on
students and tuition payers. The author calls this inefficiency the
tenure tax. The book examines how to find value in the current system,
and it offers reforms in the form of an education revolution to remake
higher education. He advocates for changes from how it hires and
contracts with professors, to the role of government and private
lending. The thesis of the book is simple: The current system is
creating a debtor class of Serfs, studying dubious majors not useful in
the job market. The result is that institutions are hunting revenue to
feed and pay the elite class, the faculty and administrators, who have
become Lords in this educational feudal system.