See NYT
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/20/upshot/three-reasons-for-those-hefty-college-tuition-bills.html?emc=edit_tnt_20151218&nlid=9633259&tntemail0=y


Mankiw tries to explain high prices for college.  In doing so he contradicts 
what he teaches.  He teaches “Price is/is forced to be/ where MC = MR” and that 
produces efficiency, fairness, “just desserts” for wages, etc, but in this 
article
he asserts 

> The third force at work is what economists call price discrimination. 
> Businesses of all sorts have an incentive to charge different prices to 
> different consumers based on their willingness and ability to pay. Movie 
> theaters, for example, charge children less than adults for a ticket.
> 
> Colleges have increasingly followed this practice by raising published prices 
> and offering more financial aid based on a family’s resources. I often joke 
> that Harvard should complete the process by setting tuition at $1 billion a 
> year. But that sticker price applies only to the children of Bill Gates. 
> Everyone else gets a special price, just for you.

I wrote about college price discrimination in January 2000.  The practice of 
“yield management” at colleges was (is?) much more odious that Mankiw 
describes.  (See Section Four of “Price Discrimination, Electronic Redlining, 
and Price Fixing in Deregulated Electric Power.” Colleges were considering 
changing ethical rules on price fixing so that some of them could become 
compliant without changing practice.

I just googled my title and the first source is 
http://www.editoracanalenergia.com.br/colunistas/Pacote/COYLE_Price_Discrimination_Electronic_Redlining.pdf.
That is in English despite the Brazil URL.
I also discovered it was once on Amazon but now unavailable. I had no idea and 
Amazon never sent a check.  There is a version in Spanish if someone prefers 
that.

Gene
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