Ivy League Presidents Take Pay Cuts Up to 25% in Crisis

Ivy League university presidents are doing some belt tightening of their own.

Half of the eight Ivy leaders have taken pay cuts of up to 25%. In 2018, the median compensation for this group was $1.4 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from tax filings.

The reductions are part of sweeping measures -- from staff salary freezes to suspending new hiring -- that U.S. colleges are taking to contend with the financial fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic.

They’re also being put in place as Congress has grown hostile to the wealthiest schools. Lawmakers passed a tax on the biggest university endowments in 2017 and the Trump administration has threatened to eliminate the tax exemption for nonprofit colleges.