I would guess that the friend isn't lying. He's just an idiot who can't do math, and can't run a business successfully, so he blames his failure on this new tax.
I can see both sides--while I think the new tax is miniscule, I also do think that government employees are overpaid. That includes teachers (I hear the conservatives cheering), police, and military (I hear conservatives booing). You could cut all their paychecks in half and you'd still have applicants lined up because of the pensions, health benefits, and security that your employer won't be going bankrupt.
I once did payroll for a college department, and I can tell you that professors are paid maybe about $90-100K per year. (Nothing like doctors, who averaged $350-400K when I did their taxes.) But the college department also employees secretaries who ostensibly supervise (babysit) students working there on work-study. If they work hard and ignore the infant sycophants around them, they are fired for being unpopular with you young punks. That's where a lot of nonprofessorial payroll gets wasted.
What that means is that NateBishop said that business is booming on college, and asked why must the average tuition increase? Then Sug said that colleges are building new buildings. Obviously, the large enrollment is the cause, and the new buildings are the effect. That explains where the money is going. In economics (if any of you are fortunate enough to last in college) you will find that booming business means a lower unit cost (because fixed overhead becomes overcovered) until expansion of capacity is required to continue the boom. Adding that new capital construction cost onto the operating cost then makes unit costs go up, contrary to your expectations of savings from the economy of scale (which is higher enrollment in this case).
If you don't get it, it's okay. Conservatives are idiots, and liberals must be infinitely patient with your childlike minds. But hey, keep on hollering and giving us a lifetime of entertainment.
As for new buildings causing old buildings to be 90% empty, you should see public college campuses in Washington State. Check out Western WA U in Bellingham. Every couple of years they finish a new useless building with all-glass sides. Then they desert an old one and claim it will be used somehow. I once asked an Olympia auditor who spoke to our accounting class, why the brand new building we were in had a never-used $500 TV mounted to the wall, in every single classroom. He had no answer. If you want to decrease government spending, you'll have to investigate the nuts and bolts, not just whine about every tax measure and expect government to decrease itself.