Card is best known for pioneering studies in the 1990s that remain
acutely relevant today, as they questioned the prevailing assumptions
about the impact of immigration on native-born U.S. workers and the
effect of minimum wage increases on domestic job growth. His work has
improved our understanding of labor markets and, according to the Nobel
committee, “completely reshaped empirical work in the economic sciences
… challenging conventional wisdom.”
“Challenging conventional wisdom” is part of Berkeley’s DNA. It is
what happens in our classrooms and laboratories; what leads to
inspiration, discovery, and new knowledge; and what results in the kind
of recognition we are celebrating today.
I also shared a budget update with the campus last week. The pandemic
led to lost enrollment, reduced revenue in athletics and other
enterprises, and a decrease in state funding, as well as increased costs
for remote instruction and COVID-19 testing. While we were able to
mitigate these impacts with such measures as a salary and hiring freeze
and federal relief funds, we are still projecting an operating deficit
for fiscal year 2021.
Looking ahead, state funding has been increased to 5 percent over
pre-pandemic levels, tuition and fee revenue has recovered, and, for the
first time in years, the UC Regents has approved a tuition increase.
Beginning in fall 2022, incoming undergraduates will be charged tuition
and fees on a cohort basis, in which rates will remain constant and
predictable during each cohort’s time at Berkeley, with moderate
increases for each subsequent, incoming cohort. The Regents also
approved annual increases to graduate tuition and fees based on
inflation. We are also relaunching a finance reform initiative to
rebuild resources in the central ledger — from which we provide funds
for essential operations, faculty salaries, capital expenses, and more —
and to reconfigure how funds
are allocated across campus. Please read the full budget update.
We are grateful to you for standing with us through our most difficult periods — and on our brightest days.