Posted on 04/24/2019 8:29:40 AM PDT by Red Badger
Elizabeth Warren may be the least jolly member of the Senate, but she is nonetheless offering up her best Santa Claus impersonation as she seeks the Democratic presidential nomination, complete with a trillion-dollar-a-decade student-loan giveaway to be paid for by those on her naughty list.
Senator Warren proposes to pay off Americans student loans in a tiered fashion: Up to $50,000 in bailouts for those earning up to $100,000 a year, gradually phased out to $0.00 for those earning $250,000 a year or more. That would eliminate all student debt for about 75 percent of borrowers and provide some reduction for all but 5 percent of borrowers.
Lest this be taken as a warrant to go out and borrow big on the chance that there will be another round of debt forgiveness in the future, Senator Warren also proposes to make college free for all students, not only eliminating tuition costs but also radically expanding federal higher-education spending to cover books, student housing and living expenses, and child care a parallel welfare state for undergraduates.
So: Free if youve already gone and borrowed money for it, and free if you havent. As the Democrats 2020 presidential-giveaway bidding war gets under way for real, that makes Senator Kamala Harriss measly hundreds of billions of dollars to pay public-school teachers more look like an amuse-bouche.
Even though the facts of the so-called crisis are grossly exaggerated as our Robert VerBruggen points out, most student-loan borrowers pay less than 5 percent of their income in student-loan debt service the inflation of college costs is a genuine concern, and one that is of especially intense interest to the federal government ,which, thanks to the Obama administration, made itself into a monopolist in the student-loan business. But Senator Warren here proposes to put out a fire with gasoline, i.e. to mitigate the effects of inflation by dumping money on the problem.
In inflation-adjusted terms, government spending on higher education has never been higher. In has climbed by nearly $2,000 per student (in inflation-adjusted dollars) since 2001. As the Foundation for Economic Education points out, Pell Grant spending alone rose 72 percent in the few short years from 2008 to 2013. Tuition and other expenses have risen right along with that spending, driven mainly by an explosion in administrative costs. In the 1980s, there were about twice as many professors as administrators on our college payrolls; today, that number has been reversed, and there are about twice as many administrators and staff as instructors. Administrative spending has increased substantially relative to spending on instruction and both are much higher in real per-student terms.
Most of this goes to personnel costs, with generous salaries for faculty and staff and benefits that a University of California audit called, gently, atypical. Senator Warren is well-positioned to know this: She was paid more than $350,000 a year to teach a single class. Harvard and other colleges are full of clever people such as Senator Warren: Offer them $1 trillion, and they will find a way to spend it. Cheap financing enables higher college prices in the same way that cheap financing enables higher housing prices the higher-education bubble is the subprime bubble with even worse underwriting standards and, in many cases, even less valuable underlying assets.
If you want to get control over tuition inflation, try turning off the spigot. Senator Warren suggests opening it up all the way and adding some new ones.
Senator Warren proposes to pay for all this with an annual tax on the savings of certain Americans only the wealthy ones, we are assured a new tax that it is not even clear Congress has the constitutional power to enact and whose effects will be unpredictable and likely destructive. Such wealth taxes used to be common in Europe, but all except three have been abandoned for the most obvious reasons: They do not produce the kind of revenue they promise, they are difficult to administer (whats Jeff Bezoss net worth right now? What will it be in 15 minutes?), and they encourage capital flight, as Frances many millionaire expatriates can attest.
Thats a high price to pay for . . . what, exactly? We are familiar with all the fine rhetoric about higher education being the key to preparing the 21st-century work force and maximizing its productivity, but we cannot help but notice that this is being championed by the same people who have helped to make our K12 education system the grotesque laughing stock that it is. The public schools are in effect a dysfunctional and wildly corrupt full-employment program for Democratic constituencies, and that same dynamic has driven much of the growth in college administration, too: There are a lot of deputy deans of social justice out there. We dont need one more, much less 10,000 more.
It is ridiculous that it costs as much as it does to get a decent undergraduate education and it is even more ridiculous that so many American families are paying the price for a decent undergraduate education without getting one. Reform is in order, but the scheme envisioned by Senator Warren is the wrong idea, to the extent that it is an idea at all and not a promissory note to Democratic primary voters as the lady from Massachusetts looks to Milwaukee and hopes for Christmas in July.
FOR A SMALL FEE IN AMERIKA!..................
Why student debt and not medical expense debt, or mortgage debt?
Until the bill comes due (which many mediocre and unprepared students are now learning).
Heck, why stop there? Credit card debt!
or gambling debt?......................Some Italian guys get pretty antsy when it gets due............
Good idea, you know, for your "friend" who might benefit :)
This will require a new Dept of Higher Education to be established with 10,000 new Federal employees. Bank on it.
Universities around the country are now probably licking their chops to raise tuition $12,500 per year to take advantage.
Who would ever want to leave college? The new career path will be to graduate at 65 and immediately go on Social Security. :)
Unfortunately, this message resonates with way too many Americans. Not just the poor or the crazy liberals. It resonates with the middle class. They want a bunch of free s__t too paid for by “the rich.” Way too many Americans think they can have free health care and free college and free everything and that “the rich” can pay for it all if they just pay their “fair share” of taxes. Its the laziness and sense of entitlement created by the Welfare State.
Evert democrats speech is like visitors day at Hotel California.
It's the lack of education provided by our 'free' primary education system. You get what you pay for..............
Free at last- Free at last! Thank God Almighty, everything is free at last!
It’s goal is to draw Millenials off the couch to go and vote Dem.
It will likely succeed in that.
The students will ultimately pay for it through the government debt.
Now they got my vote. Wow. Like AOC said "You want to do something just pay it."/s
Just make sure the Free Republic and talk radio listeners and GOP voters pay for this. I'm low on money myself. I want my benefit money. Wow. My whole life changed today./s
In true seriousness:
I live in an apt. complex. I worked since I was about 16 and since 21 full time to age 71.
In my apt. complex there are a number of Section 8s---NOT because I live in a slum. They are forced onto several complexes here.
They get Obamaphones with annual contracts paid, full medical coverage, welfare cash and food money, and about 95% of the housing paid (voucher Section 8). They never worked a day and are not disabled. I went past them on the way to work every lousy day for years and they loafed. I hate them.
That’s a toss up between Bernie and AOC...as far as smarts go.
One aspect of student loan reform that I would support: colleges and universities should be responsible for a fraction of the loans that are defaulted by their students.
The advising students receive would likely be different in many cases if universities knew that they would be liable for students with huge debt after graduating from unemployable majors.
Looks like Elizabeth Warren has decided she does not want to be president!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.