Skip to comments.
Congress Should Make Universities Pay For Handing Out Useless Degrees
The Federalist ^
| 09/03/2024
| Andrew Cuff
Posted on 09/03/2024 6:53:00 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
America’s youth are being pushed into a one-size-fits-all college track that saddles many with debt — without preparing them for careers.
A few months ago, a handful of lucky Gen Xers virtually won the lottery when the White House directed the Department of Education to “adjust” their student loan accounts, in some cases down to zero. Joel Lambdin, a 49-year-old string musician from New York City, became a poster child for this one-time forgiveness measure, as Business Insider reported. During his studies and bohemian career, Lambdin had accumulated $250,000 in student debt that remained in forbearance for more than 25 years — until suddenly, one day, a letter from the White House wiped his debt clean.
As Fox News host Jesse Watters commented to his audience: “Who paid for it? You did.”
Nobody on the right or left side of the political aisle denies the urgent need for reform in how the nation funds postsecondary education. America’s young people are being pushed into a one-size-fits-all college track that saddles many with large student debts — too often without preparing them for rewarding careers. But the left’s “solution” — transferring mountains of student debt to taxpayers, many of whom did not attend college — only encourages more bad behavior, including increased student borrowing and reckless spending by unaccountable universities.
The Biden Administration’s continuing difficulties in federal court — which just this week saw SCOTUS reaffirm the Eighth Circuit’s rejection of the Department of Education’s attempt to cancel student debt via changes to the income-driven repayment regulation — underline the need for a legislative solution. A better approach that addresses the root of mounting student debt has emerged from the House of Representatives: The College Cost Reduction Act (CCRA), a comprehensive higher education reform bill sponsored by House Education and Workforce Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, R-N.C.
In her opening statement at the bill’s markup session, Rep. Foxx did not mince words: “We are scamming young Americans. College prices are skyrocketing, and college value is stagnating.” But unlike targeted debt cancellations, the CCRA focuses on the colleges themselves by requiring them to have skin in the game. Instead of students and taxpayers shouldering all the risk themselves, the bill would hold universities partially accountable for defaults by their student borrowers.
In this way, the CCRA’s core components would directly address the underlying causes of student debt concerns instead of trying to place a Band-Aid on the symptoms. The bill’s reforms would hold colleges financially accountable for overpriced degrees that leave students in debt without good job prospects. It would establish PROMISE grants to reward colleges that establish a maximum price at the time of enrollment for their entire program.
Under the bill, if poor student outcomes resulted, institutions would be financially responsible for a portion of any loans their students struggled to pay off. If a large percentage of these sub-prime student loans supported study in a specific department, the university could shed some liability by shuttering that underperforming program.
The CCRA also mandates transparency by requiring institutions to provide prospective students with clear, personalized information about the costs and expected return on investment (ROI) of their education. Taken together, these measures would create strong market incentives for schools to orient their program portfolio toward the needs of students and employers.
At the markup session, Rep. Foxx contrasted higher education with other types of purchases, highlighting the absurdity of what we are asking of young college-age Americans: “Students are the buyers and colleges are sellers. Yet in this market, the product is sold without the buyer knowing the real price,” she pointed out. “The product often underperforms expectations. And the product would not be viable at its price point without the injection of nearly two trillion taxpayer dollars industry-wide.”
Universities that offer low-ROI programs should be losing customers and going broke. Instead, bad federal policy rewards institutions that lead their students to a dead end.
This problem is too important to ignore because higher education is intimately tied to the American economy in myriad ways. University research and development facilitate the creation of new technologies; the curriculum establishes industry frameworks and provides credentials for professionals like doctors, lawyers, and engineers; and college campuses are community cultural and intellectual hubs.
The CCRA creates new incentives to improve quality by enhancing competition. Currently, universities are protected by an onerous accreditation system that gives existing institutions a competitive advantage over new entrants to the market. The CCRA will reform the accreditation process, making it more transparent and focused on outcomes rather than inputs or ideology.
By breaking up the accreditation monopoly, the bill would foster a more competitive environment, incentivizing existing universities to improve their programs and reduce costs while opening the marketplace to new and innovative institutions. This shift would not only benefit students by providing more educational options but would also pressure institutions to maintain high standards and provide value.
The benefits of the CCRA extend beyond students and parents. Taxpayers would appreciate how the CCRA restores fiscal sanity to education. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the bill would save taxpayers $92 billion over just the next four years, largely because it would reverse the worst excesses of the Biden administration’s debt cancellation agenda while forcing colleges to price tuition more competitively. It turns out that exploiting students so colleges can grow their endowments is not only unfair; it’s unsustainably expensive for the country.
The CCRA represents an overdue paradigm shift from the worn-out policy of giving higher education a blank check. Instead of arbitrary loan forgiveness, we need accountability. This bipartisan legislation would give universities skin in the game. When 18-year-olds agree to debt-finance four years on a college campus, they deserve to know the school has a financial incentive to prepare them for success in their career.
Andrew Cuff is a senior policy analyst for the Higher Education Reform Initiative at the America First Policy Institute.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: college; degrees; education; tuition; university
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-29 next last
To: SeekAndFind
Define worthless.
Are history, literature, art, music, and philosophy worthless?
What about sociology, linguistics, psychology, economics, and library science?
2
posted on
09/03/2024 7:00:03 PM PDT
by
Fai Mao
(The US government is run by pedophiles and Perverts for pedophiles and perverts.)
To: SeekAndFind
Great idea. I think universities should also bear at least some of the cost of wasting people's time and resources.
To: SeekAndFind
Only colleges and banks should issue student loans. NO Government guaranties other than GI Bill. Then we will see a return to serious studies, with art and humanities left to the wealthy who bring cash.
The idea of a government guaranteeing a loan for a degree that offers no better income opportunity than a high school dropout is insane. Like financing a house for someone who has never held a job.
4
posted on
09/03/2024 7:04:38 PM PDT
by
ETCM
(“There is no security, no safety, in the appeasement of evil.” — Ronald Reagan)
To: SeekAndFind
Years ago, there was a story about a guy who had gotten a Master’s degree in Puppetry and he was advocating for loan relief back then.
When my son wanted to become a pilot after a visit to the University of North Dakota, I told him I couldn’t allow him to go into debt for $160,000 for a $35,000 per year job. Neighbor of ours told him if he wanted to be a pilot, to join the military. He flew KC135s for the Air Force.
5
posted on
09/03/2024 7:14:31 PM PDT
by
Mean Daddy
(Every time Hillary lies, a demon gets its wings. - Windflier)
To: SeekAndFind
All they would have to do is apply the same rules that they use to go after commercial and private institutions. They won’t though because it would decimate the loan industry and higher education scam. Many of these courses of study will result in degrees that will be replaced by AI. Probably better to have your kid get a degree or trade that involves a human person ... nurse, doctor, electrician, auto tech, carpenter, plumber, etc.
6
posted on
09/03/2024 7:16:19 PM PDT
by
RetiredTexasVet
(We used to be a Republic, we are now a Fascist Klepto-Thugocracy.)
To: SeekAndFind
NO, NO AND NO AGAIN....Congress is not authorized to do this under the Constitution.
IF anything, it's the universities that are culpable for this mess.
7
posted on
09/03/2024 7:28:34 PM PDT
by
ealgeone
To: Fai Mao
Are history, literature, art, music, and philosophy worthless? What about sociology, linguistics, psychology, economics, and library science?
No, they are most certainly not worthless. I hold degrees in history and library science and have taken courses in most of those other subjects, and I feel blessed for having done so. However, some of the "studies" fields--black studies, women's studies, etc.--I would question.
8
posted on
09/03/2024 8:02:11 PM PDT
by
Fiji Hill
To: Fai Mao
Are history, literature, art, music, and philosophy worthless? What about sociology, linguistics, psychology, economics, and library science?
Of course these disciplines are not worthless.
However, their worth should be determined by market value i.e. what a student is willing to pay for the degree based on what he can expect as an income. Not what the government will loan.
9
posted on
09/03/2024 8:15:14 PM PDT
by
JParris
To: SeekAndFind
Biden is making poor people who cant afford college to pay rich kids, mostly women, for these silly degrees.
To: Fai Mao
Worthless degrees to ME are degrees where once you obtain it, the only job you can get is as a professor teaching kids so that they can also get that degree.
A friend’s sister has a degree in 18th century French poetry. And the only job she can get with that degree is as a professor teaching 18th century French poetry.
My friend insists that my way of thinking is hastening society’s slide into idiocracy.
To: Fai Mao
Are history, literature, art, music, and philosophy worthless? No, but you should not be going into debt to get those degrees.
What about sociology, linguistics, psychology, economics, and library science?
Linguistics is useful. Economics is kind of a maybe so, maybe no.
As for the rest, frankly no.
And once again not something you should be going into debt for.
Get a degree in something that will allow you to earn the income to pay back any loans you took out.
If you want to minor in something that will not earn you a cent that is up to you.
If, after you have acquired a marketable skill, you want to play around with subjects that caught your interest that is also up to you. Goodness know I did that for decades. Now I just read books on odd subjects that will not put a cent in my pocket because I like doing that. But I do not buy the books on credit.
12
posted on
09/03/2024 10:20:29 PM PDT
by
Harmless Teddy Bear
( Not my circus. Not my monkeys. But I can pick out the clowns at 100 yards.)
To: SeekAndFind
When PARENTS have spent over 20 YEARS pampering their little darlings with PARTICIPATION TROPHIES-—WHAT “CAREERS” do they think will be attached to their future years???
The tree grows as it is bent.....
13
posted on
09/03/2024 11:27:36 PM PDT
by
ridesthemiles
(not giving up on TRUMP---EVER)
To: SeekAndFind
People with worthless degrees (gender studies, etc.) should sue the schools that sold them.
14
posted on
09/04/2024 12:15:02 AM PDT
by
UnwashedPeasant
(The pandemic we suffer from is not COVID. It is Marxist Democrat Leftism. )
To: Fai Mao
I’ve been saying for years colleges/universities should be forced to tell students what they can expect to earn with a degree in their major.
Most of the degrees you mention only pay if you are teaching or are able to get a position as a researcher.
What are their expected salaries?
I encourage everyone to forego a degree and go to trade school or junior college. I have three associates degrees and a cerfication which have served me well in my field. Worked while I went to school at night. No student loans.
15
posted on
09/04/2024 2:01:33 AM PDT
by
TStro
(God created everyone equal. Samuel Colt made them polite)
To: SeekAndFind
Congress is a willing accomplice in this worthless degree scam to line the pockets of these “liberal higher education” institutions.
But they are not ultimately responsible, it is the parents and students who make the choice to get an ancient Egyptian lesbian art studies degree without doing any research to find out if any cash can be made off of it
Went to a graduation ceremony for a friend who kid graduated from a private school and couldn’t believe how many got an equestrian degree. At 30k plus a year
Might as well practice “ you want fries with that”, nevermind those jobs have gone to robots as well
16
posted on
09/04/2024 3:09:53 AM PDT
by
blitz128
To: UnwashedPeasant
I disagree, that is like saying you should sue ford and the bar when you tbone a car while drunk.
You made the choice to drink and drive. The made the choice to spend the money on degrees they should have known offer little possibilities of future income.
Stop going after these “degrees” and they will go away
17
posted on
09/04/2024 3:14:47 AM PDT
by
blitz128
To: SeekAndFind
I blame the parents and supposed students that pay for a worthless degree.
50% of college grads don’t work in a field that has anything to do with their degree.
1 in 4 higher education graduates are earning less than $32,000 — the median annual income for high school graduates.
Stupidity begins at home.
18
posted on
09/04/2024 4:27:22 AM PDT
by
maddog55
(The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
To: Fai Mao
Why not tie degree cost to the salary the student will get when they graduate?
That would end useless degrees and there’s a ton of them
19
posted on
09/04/2024 4:32:15 AM PDT
by
maddog55
(The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
To: SeekAndFind
The saddest part about the way higher education has been destroyed is that we now decry the failure of college to prepare one for a job rather than college’s failure to prepare one for life.
20
posted on
09/04/2024 4:41:12 AM PDT
by
HIDEK6
(God bless Donald Trump)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-29 next last
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.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson