Harvard’s endowment is roughly $50 billion. Its operating budget is about $6 billion. The endowment grows by 8โ10% in a typical year, generating returns that exceed what the university spends on instruction. By any honest accounting, Harvard is a sovereign-wealth fund that runs a college as a side project โ and its tax treatment hasn’t caught up.
The 2017 tax law imposed a 1.4% excise tax on net investment income at the wealthiest endowments. It raised about $200 million a year. That’s a rounding error against the underlying tax shield, and the policy debate has barely moved since.
The endowment tax shield is enormous
A private investor earning Harvard’s returns on $50 billion would pay capital gains tax, dividend tax, and in many cases state income tax. Harvard pays effectively nothing beyond the new 1.4% excise. At the long-term capital gains rate, the foregone federal revenue on a single 10% year exceeds $1 billion. Compounded across the dozen wealthiest schools, the annual subsidy approaches the size of the federal Pell Grant program.
The justification has always been that universities serve a public mission. That argument made more sense when endowments were modest reserves rather than the dominant balance-sheet item. Harvard now spends a smaller share of its endowment annually than most private foundations are legally required to.
The “we use it for financial aid” defense doesn’t survive the math
Defenders point to generous financial aid as proof the endowment serves the public. Harvard does provide free tuition to families under a certain income threshold, and the program is real. But the total financial aid budget is a single-digit percentage of endowment value, well below what the endowment earns in a normal year.
If the goal of the tax exemption is to subsidize aid, the policy is wildly inefficient โ most of the tax break flows to investment compounding rather than to students. A simple rule requiring elite universities to spend a minimum percentage of endowment value on direct aid, similar to the 5% rule for private foundations, would redirect billions toward the stated mission.
What corporate-style taxation would look like
A serious reform wouldn’t tax the school โ it would tax the investment vehicle. The wealthiest endowments could be treated as separately taxable entities, paying ordinary corporate rates on net investment income above a generous exemption. Spending on instruction, research, and aid would remain deductible, preserving the educational mission while removing the pure asset-accumulation subsidy.
This would hit perhaps two dozen schools and leave the rest untouched. Critics will argue it punishes success, but that framing assumes endowment growth is the success. Education is the success; endowment growth is a means, and at some point a means stops needing a subsidy.
The bottom line
The current arrangement treats institutions with hedge-fund-scale balance sheets as if they were the small denominational colleges of 1894. They aren’t. A serious tax on the largest endowments wouldn’t end higher education or even meaningfully shrink Harvard โ it would just stop the federal government from subsidizing investment compounding at institutions that already have more money than they spend.
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