Posted on 05/09/2007 6:27:07 AM PDT by .cnI redruM
If populists like John Edwards and Pat Buchanan gave a Tinkers Dn about the poor working people in America, they would condemn our governments student loan programs from on high. New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has done his home state proud by ripping the lid off of the high-binders and grafters who pocket the taxpayer-funded swag, in manners aberrant to the current legal restrictions. What he doesnt get after with any skill at all is fundamental dishonesty of government-subsidized overcharging.
Financial aid officers at Columbia University colluded with corporations associated with the university to steal large sums of money, on unethical stock transactions. In return for this, they threw these companies more loans. Cuomo did exactly what he should have done. He threw the book at them with condign prosecutorial malice and will take a well-earned victory lap in front of The House Education Committee.
The bad news consists of what Cuomo wont throw anyone in jail for. Cuomo cannot lock up a bunch of malefactors who engage in moral turpitude that enjoys legal sanction. There wont be any investigation of the fact that colleges and universities enhance their tuitions and thereby their bank accounts at a rate far above the underlying rate of inflation faced by producers and consumers in the US economy.
The loans and grants that were intended to give the common man a leg up are paying for the tuitions of the young and very privileged. In fact, almost 1/3 of the students whose parents earn six-figure salaries enjoy the benefits of financial aid. Werent those dollars intended for the other America?
The colleges and universities have incentives to behave badly. They receive cash up front, every time the amount of aid gets raised. It follows as no shocker that tuition increases normally follow aid increases. Neal McCluskey, a Cato Institute policy analyst, points out the extent to which these high-minded centers of learning get down and wallow in the political money troughs.
According to the Center for Responsive Politics, education interests spent over $80 million lobbying federal policymakers last year.
And how has this investment of political capital paid off? McCluskey elucidates.
From 1996 to 2006, the College Board reports, the average, inflation-adjusted, per-pupil cost of tuition, fees, room and board rose 28 percent at four-year private schools and 38 percent at four-year public ones. Meanwhile, inflation-adjusted aid provided through federal programs rose 95 percent, from $48.3 billion to $94.4 billion.
The lobbyists average a return on investment of 5,763%, assuming the $80 million is a constant expenditure, over the last ten years. Thus, it doesnt come as a surprise that a lot of student aid goes to people who have a moral obligation to give to charity, not partake. Some of the families receiving student aid should be offering the less fortunate a hand up, not bilking the middle class taxpayer for a handout.
Unlike the corruption unearthed by Andrew Cuomo, no one will do a day of time in jail. It will only be encouraged to rage on unabated. Our citizens believe they have voted themselves rich, at someone elses expense.
A college degree-holder will earn, on average $1 million over the course of their career. A debt-holder leaving Old-Ivy $30,000 in debt, will only need to pay roughly 9% of their annual salary to amortize the loan in twenty years. This assumes a moderately benign interest rate, so that the borrower pays about $60,000 total over the 20 years.
Thus, working class families get taxed to send upper middle class and wealthy families through college on aid packages. With this flagrant example of one America sticking it hard to the other, I cant help but wonder where Lou Dobbs and Senator Sherrod Brown have been hiding on this one.
But no, our champions of the common man never stand tall on an issue that where they have to climb athwart the sound-bite demagogues. If it cant be explained in a 20-second blurb, none of our modern Magister Plebes will touch it. We have to save Americas working classes. Who else will we tax when we want someone else to pay our college tuitions?
What's wrong with authors and editors these days? Can't we expect that someone, somewhere, is familiar with figures of speech?
It's a tinkers dam, a temporary dam used to contain molted metal that is destroyed right after use, hence of little value.
About time that these people learn to tow the line /sarc.
Depends on the "bet". I'd imagine you could get a loan for medical, law, or engineering degrees. Ethnic studies? Not so much.
Hardly. If colleges are able to vet potential applicants before they arrive on campus, a loan officer has the same capability. Car insurance companies do this all the time. Ever noticed how students with higher GPAs get lower rates?
>>>>Stem Cell research banned altogether? You may not be aware of this, but more stem cell research happens in the US than in the rest of the world combined. Embryonic Stem Cell research receives no Federal Funding. That means if a research institution forewent Federal support, they could work on embryonic stem cells all day long, and no one could lay a finger on them.
>>>Need new engineers? Indias gotem and so does China
Oh, and guess where most of them are trained?
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Almost, but not quite.
Those jobs wouldn’t be “lost” if there was NO MINIMUM WAGE REQUIREMENT.
That is a damn wonderful analogy!
Where did you find this?
What happens when a multi millionaire's son makes the case his rich father is not going to pay for his son's education, and the son needs the money to go to school,because dad doesn't support him? - tom
“In fact, almost 1/3 of the students whose parents earn six-figure salaries enjoy the benefits of financial aid. Werent those dollars intended for the other America?”
Aren’t most college students 18 years or older? What the heck does the income of their parents have to do with financial aid? Last time I checked, 18-year-olds were adults.
IIRC one of my investment advisors emailed it to me.
You know what that argument reminds me of, the health and welfare of the mother argument in favor of abortion procedures. If Sonny is on the splits with Dad, and has no way of say, joining the military or landing a job to pay for his education, he should, perhaps, give Dad a call....
The expression is a "tinker's dam"; it has nothing to do with cussing.
Nice story and analogy!!
That one’s a keeper.
You said:You could eliminate the student loan program tomorrow, and thered be an influx of US banks that would gladly make the loans.
***
These are unsecured loans, without guarantors. None of the banks I represent would lend at reasonable rates for the amounts we are talking about without collateral or co-makers of some sort. Further, govt loans can’t be discharged in bankruptcy. So, I disagree with this point. As to whether the government ought to be in the business of making loans, I look forward to that discussion.
'A Tinker's Dam' is not a swear word. It's a euphemism to avoid swearing.
I wouldn't trust anyone on their political opinions when they misuse a common phrase: I don't give a g-sh d-rn what they say after something that d-mb....
Government should get out of the business of subsidizing financial aide to all children, regardless of what their parents make.
I didn't understand I guess. Should the government not finanace any, or just stop financing the ones with rich parents?
The rich can almost always look after themselves. But as Fred Thompson said the other day, when the Democrats get after the rich, the middle-class should not stand too close to that target. The redistributors always manage to do a better job of redistributing the wealth of the near-rich, the upper-middle class, or even the middle middle class than the wealth of the Soroes or the Buckleys.
You are certainly welcome to use it.
I think I have posted it to KarlInOhio before this.
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