We need to get rid of student loans. The problem is that Universities don't ever need to worry about a student defaulting and can keep increasing the prices of tuition with impunity. If they default, they don't care, because the money is already in the bank.
If universities had to worry about students defaulting, they would get rid of bullshit degrees that don't result in an actual job and the prices would come done due to free market forces.
Some universities have started doing income share agreements. They front the tuition cost for a portion of your future income. Depending on your degree program, they will take X percentage for Y years.
How does that work for people who receive a large portion of their compensation in things like equity in a private company that is extremely hard to value?
Would these plans result in the proliferation of odd compensation schemes to get around these repayment plans?
I'm not exactly sure. These programs are still in there trial phase anyway.
The one program that I looked into had a relatively low cap on it, like $60,000, so they only take a cut of the first 60k. Plus the majority of people (i.e., outside of engineering) don't get equity anyway.
Couldn't you just use income reported to the IRS? Then any odd payment scheme to get around repayment terms would necessarily be tax evasion, which is much more serious and lets you lean on the IRS for enforcement and legislation.
Many forms of what you call "tax evasion" are in fact legal in the US.
Lots of very, very wealthy people have no "income" at all, which means they don't pay taxes.
The problem is that "income" is narrowly defined (for a reason) so things like someone owning a large corporation which triples in value over a year making them a billionaire on paper don't even show up on taxes because officially that person hasn't "made" that money until they sell the corporation. Even when they do, it's taxed at a lower rate than "income" because it's a different "kind" of money.
"You’ll repay 9% of your income above the repayment threshold – earn less and you won’t repay. Once you leave your course, you’ll only repay when your income is above the repayment threshold. The current UK threshold is £25,725 a year, £2,143 a month, or £494 a week." [0]
I haven’t seen this mentioned in this thread yet, but there are income-based repayment plans for US loans. There are different plans, but it works much the same way as above, roughly: if you earn above a income threshold (~$20k), then you pay 10% of your income until a) the loan is repaid or b) 20 years have passed (remaining balance is discharged. But, you have to apply for these programs, and many people don’t know they exist and loan servicers have incentives to keep people on traditional repayment plans.
It’s not a cure-all: you can still default, and there are cases where you can end up repaying more than a traditional loan. Nevertheless, it should be the [/puts on sunglasses]...default option.
The problem is that the federal government (with taxpayer money) is acting as a middle man here. So universities don't have an incentive to make their students employable.
If universities were getting paid directly based on income, that would create the right incentives.
The US has a similar repayment program called Pay As You Earn (PAYE). It ties your payment amount to 10% of your income that is above 150% of the federal poverty level. This only applies to federal loans (not private loans) and requires opt-in, which probably causes a lot of people to not do it.
It's insane to me how quick some folks are to dismiss what they deem "bullshit degrees".
It's our culture that has turned education into some kind of "investment" in future job prospects. To put it simply, education was never intended to be that way, nor should it. It's as if studying the arts is some kind of luxury for those who are already financially well-off.
Education is supposed to be about learning just for the sake of learning, which benefits all of us. If there is not a place for people from certain fields of study, that's a failure of our economy and priorities. Yet it seems that too many have just accepted the current reality as "just the way things are".
I agree that the previous role of education was not intended to be strictly vocational, but that role changed with the industrial revolution following policies like the Morrill Land-Grant Act calling for institutions that focus on more vocationally-minded tracks, like agriculture and engineering, to support the economy. We can debate if this was in the better interest of society, but I think the role of education is allowed to change.
My understanding was that this idea of education being about learning for its own sake was from an era when only the children of the privileged class received higher education and since their future as part of the future elite was more or less guaranteed from their upbringing and connections and it was thought important than the future members of the elite class are broadly well-educated, not merely specialists in their roles.
The reality now is that education is more or less for everyone and most people, even at elite institutions, don't have a clear path to being a member of the elite without working super hard for specific career goals. It would be odd, then, for some of those students to continue to pretend that they have a clear path to being a member of the elite and learn the kinds of things that are disproportionately important for the members of the elite, when they have to accomplish a lot to get there. The world is simply far more competitive.
It's our culture that has turned education into some kind of "investment" in future job prospects. To put it simply, education was never intended to be that way, nor should it. It's as if studying the arts is some kind of luxury for those who are already financially well-off.
Historically, you certainly had a division between apprenticeships for the poor, university for the rather-rich and for middle class and talented and finishing school, philosophical speculation, tutoring by artists, etc for the idle wealthy.
The world where "everyone" was somewhat entitled to the basics of a university education was a product of WWII and the GI bill. Not that this was a bad thing but it's worth saying it's a somewhat recent thing. Moreover, while university education references "learning for learning's sake", I think the fundamental thing is more "the basic skills a citizen needs."
And even here, our society hasn't really integrated the exact use of twenty years of bureaucratic lecture classes. Going back to pure skill-oriented education isn't appealing but a broadening of the learning process is important.
That said, university education is now kind of the worst many world - purely job oriented but sort-of fantasy mid-level bureaucracy jobs that most students won't actually get.
It's meaningless to talk about what education was "intended" to be, because it varies from society to society, and changes over time. In general, we as a society decide what it is intended to be about.
But if you are going to look at history, then why not go all the way to the root of the modern Western academia - where the word itself originates?
On one hand, it was indeed about learning just for the sake of learning. But on the other hand, it also didn't have degrees, positions, tenure, or any other attributes of a formal hierarchy.
And note that it was something that people did aside from gainful employment (or other source of income). Which means that it was closed to most, not even because they weren't welcome there, but because they didn't have the free time to devote to learning for the sake of learning.
Could we revive the Academy today, free for everybody? Sure, but I don't think this would solve any of the problems with "bullshit degrees".
Learning for the sake of learning can happen at home with access to public library, YouTube, GreatCourses, Coursera, etc.
The argument needs to address why learning for the sake of learning at a specific physical location with the price ticket of $40k'ish a year is drastically better.
I think I disagree with almost everything in your post. Historically, education was for the ultra elite/wealthy who could afford to not work and still live. Or in places like ancient India, education was for individuals who willfully chose to forego material comforts and wealth, not unlike devout ascetics.
The "education is about education" sentiment you mention is quite literally the brain-child of the ultra privileged.
I don't think the situation you describe has _ever_ been what education is "supposed" to be about. It's an noble goal, but it doesn't reflect reality. And a degree which cost over $100,000 to acquire, but doesn't yield any job prospects... if that isn't a "bullshit degree" then I don't know what is.
> Education is supposed to be about learning just for the sake of learning, which benefits all of us.
Does it?
Human instructed education is a limited resource. Unlike self-directed or automated education, it doesn't scale without educators. And there aren't an infinite supply of those.
Ergo, a price must be paid to be educated.
What should that price be? How should it be set? Who should pay it?
I'm honestly asking, regarding your assertion (I believe) that education shouldn't be driven by utility and future-ability-to-repay.
If universities had to worry about students defaulting
Not just that. You can imagine additional benefits if the incentives of the parties involved are realigned. It would be in the interest of lenders to evaluate the readiness of students to attend college. This would potentially lead to better, less gamable testing.
It might make less sense, from a lender's perspective, for a student to go straight from high school to college. Instead perhaps they would want to see evidence from a couple of years of life outside of school that their loan would be repaid. The potential student would need to make a case to the lender and herself.
Yeah this is a problem that caused itself. Price fixing always breaks a market, and this loan backing by fiat is like a cancerous version of price fixing.
This is simply untrue. They do care. For institutions with high default rates (greater than 30%), they risk missing out on the federal student loans (imo gravy train). [0]. It appears that this time around, a good number of technical/trade related institutions lost out. [0]
Why wouldn't it be the responsibility of the students to not take out loans for stupid degrees? And also the responsibility of the banks for giving out the loans only for useful studies?
I don't see any party here that needs rescuing by the government.
We like to at least have the allusion that you can start anywhere on the socioeconomic scale and end up better (sometimes far better) than you started. Education has long been one of the best ways to increase your lifetime earning potential, and having the government backing allows someone who had little growing up to receive the same education as the kid whose parents are paying for everything, and to go as far in life as they possibly can.
There are obviously holes in this narrative, but we like telling ourselves this can happen.
While there's not enough value in 17th century art history for the US to graduate 200k scholars per year and expect in-field employment, there is value to society in general to not losing our history and learning more. Letting the banks decide who gets loans will instantly mean those who can't pay cash cannot pursue that education or need to go on cheaper routes for college. They may or may not be viewed as a comparable education and quality candidate.
I'm not a fan of our current system, but a purely utilitarian system I see proposed seems likely to continue the spreading the social divides between the rich, middle class, and poor.
I'm an advocate for cutting a lot of the unnecessary fluff and expenses from college. Administrative overhead is excessive. Dorms are way nicer than they need to be. Alas, other colleges have nice dorms, so a single college choosing to go cheap on the dorms will probably decrease admissions and thereby revenue.
Alcohol, tobacco, obesity, and general unhealthy lifestyle likely underpins more risk to the economy than student lending. It’s perhaps more “priced in”, but otherwise seems much more serious.
Drug abuse is less long-term priced in and likely also has higher aggregate risk as well.
There's a difference between risk and harm. Risks are something that represent an unknown future harm to the economy, likely in the form of a potential recession. The things you list undoubtedly waste resources, both from loss of productivity and from spending resources that otherwise could have been utilized for something else, but they're known quantities.
In a sense the things you list are kind of like the broken windows fallacy. The increase in healthcare spending shows up in our GDP, but isn't an efficient use of the resources.
I also imagine that student loan debt could reduce local growth. If you have a graduate using most of their income on repaying loans, that's money that may have been spent locally and is instead sent to the bank. Of course the opposite is true before graduation, where inflated costs of education result in more money in the local economy. However due to interest it may be the case that the former outweighs the latter.
The amount that's owed is known, but ability to repay can change.
Suppose that someone invents a better version of ELIZA, and everyone in the psychotherapy business is suddenly out of work.
Or slightly less absurdly, suppose that Intuit and H&R Block mess up their next round of lobbying, and the IRS implements that one-click tax payment we've all been asking for. And the accountant industry shrinks by a few percent and wages go down for the ones that are left.
Either of those would be a significant shift in the job prospects of a large group of people, which could affect how many student loans actually get repaid.
I think it might also count as a risk if it suddenly became fashionable to get degrees in, say, underwater basket weaving. As in, incoming students aren't perfectly rational with perfect information about what degrees have what job prospects, and I'm assuming the college loan system might not react quickly if something caused an overall shift towards less economically useful degrees.
It does lack one "feature" that helps the bad mortgages cause problems, in that I don't think it would be self-reinforcing. From what I understand, subprime defaults were contagious in a way that I don't think this would be.
> I don't see any party here that needs rescuing by the government.
Contrary to public perception, there's no robust investment market for student debt. US government ends up purchasing most of it through Treasury. In theory it's a great deal, as it gets to borrow at low Treasury rates and originate at higher rates.
I don't have a link to the original source, but "In September 2018, the U.S. Treasury Department revealed in its annual report that student loans account for 36.8% of all U.S. government assets." https://www.investopedia.com/articles/personal-finance/08121...
Devaluing those assets (which Treasury marks to market) would significantly dampen (if not destroy) US government's borrowing ability as well as make some government entitlement programs [at least temporarily] insolvent.
Yes, the whole situation fixes itself by removing taxpayer guaranteed loans. If taxpayers want to assist in education, taxpayers should provide scholarships.
It’s not the bank’s responsibility because they aren’t at risk of a default on the loan for the student picking a useful degree. Remove that government backstop and banks are going to get awfully good at rejecting $200k loans for an out of state B.A. degree in Renaissance Era French Literature.
Banks already reject that, because they aren't getting a guarantee. The issue is the loans issued by the Department of Education, which are the non-dischargeable ones.
This is a good idea. Even if there is shaming by ranking universities with most to least number of student loan defaulters or alumni loans will be a good start here.
> If universities had to worry about students defaulting, they would get rid of bullshit degrees that don't result in an actual job and the prices would come done due to free market forces.
This is a hypothetical but classic example of how regulation is required to support a free market.
<pedant>The predecessor of the Stafford Loan program was created in 1965, so it was like this for most of our parents.</pedant>
But, the cost of school has outpaced inflation for that period, making the situation worse. No question about that.
We'd probably all be better off if the government simply gave grants to students who meet some minimum threshold. Call it top 20% of class or thereabouts.
Most of those administrators are there for a reason. Regulatory compliance takes manpower (which costs money). Perhaps we regulating the wrong things, or doing too much of it. But, regulations rarely appear for no reason at all.
Some states are making efforts to curb the costs of textbooks and materials. I'm currently working on software to help CA schools roll out their ZTC programs.[1]
> This comment is an example of how any amount of problems caused by government intervention can be framed as a need for more government intervention.
And your comment is an example of assuming that government regulation is at best a necessary evil and something to be avoided if at all possible. Most of western Europe has has regulated university fees for decades, and by all accounts this works pretty well. Public opinion in the UK (even from a lot of the political right) is that the current 9k/year cap is too high if anything.
> And your comment is an example of assuming that government regulation is at best a necessary evil and something to be avoided if at all possible.
The role of government regulation is a separate question, but we're really jumping the shark when we can't even acknowledge basic cause and effect.
It's not surprising that government policy making tons of student loan money available led to more students being willing to take out bigger loans. This is like Markets 101.
It's tough to take opponents seriously when basic, predictable side effects of favored policies are ignored just to recommend heavier-handed policies of the same kind.
> It's not surprising that government policy making tons of student loan money available led to more students being willing to take out bigger loans. This is like Markets 101.
Totally agree with you on this.
> It's tough to take opponents seriously when basic, predictable side effects of favored policies are ignored just to recommend heavier-handed policies of the same kind.
It seems likely to me that the side effect wasn't ignored. Probably there was somebody proposing the "heavy handed" version of the legislation (which actually makes sense because it mitigates the side effect), but somebody else was opposing it because they don't like regulation. Thus, this problematic legislation emerged as a compromise.
Opposition to regulation often seems to be based on the idea that in practice regulation causes more problems than it solves. My observation is that regulation (esp. in the US) often does have this problem, but only because there is such opposition to regulation that it is almost impossible to enact the stronger and more sensible regulation that would actually work.
In short, it is often ideological opposition to regulation that causes it to fail, rather than the case that regulation in general doesn't work.
Sometimes it doesn't work just because it wasn't a good idea to regulate in that way. However there are countless examples of regulation that was crippled in the US, but that has a very successful (and generally stronger) counterpart in Europe.
Perhaps it's just that corporate interests have captured governments. But that too seems like a symptom of distrust in government leading to it being hamstrung and underfunded. I guess it's circular.
It sure wasn't like this for our parents. The UC system was close to free in the 60s. Portland State University's very first summer session was $50 for tuition and fees. Universities supported simply by taxes, not a byzantine system of public and private loans (still backed by the government, of course), like is common in other Western nations.
I'm 100% in on getting the government out of the lending business and back into the "higher ed is a public good" business. I'd rather they just return the actual sticker price to what it was a generation ago, and make it realistic for people to work student jobs to earn the cost of their tuition.
Government contribution made it possible to get my degree for free basically. We don't have a student loan bubble while still having a pretty high educational standard, even if that suffered in recent years.
We might not have the most tenured professors though, since those a drawn to centralize in institution with high prestige. But with the free flow of information today, this centralization of excellence becomes less important.
But anyway it probably isn't a problem with too much/too few government intervention and more of a problem of intervention being constructive or not. Bad intervention is probably worse than no intervention, I agree.
Perhaps, but some things are inherent to how markets work.
It's not surprising that by making a ton of student loan money available, that more students are more willing to spend more money, and thus prices rise.
Where's the free market here? As far as I know, student loans are guaranteed by the government so the universities are not incentivized to keep the cost down because no matter how much they charge, students can "afford" to pay.
A free market? Nobody but nobody would be stupid enough to lend money to students in a free market. The student would be an infeasible credit risk. They have no money or assets.
I heard an interesting proposal recently that sounded like venture capital for education. Students would receive tuition money and the lender would receive a percentage of their post graduation salary for a specified number of years.
Even without novel approaches students already get non-subsidized lines of credit so I don’t think it’s unheard of
That reminds me of the Paradox of the Court. Obviously not quite as straightforward but such a payment model does encourage at least some degree of sandbagging.
On another note the idea rubs me as immoral in ways that loans don't for reasons I am not quite able to articulate. Like viscerally seeming too far too similar to indenteture.
Indenture is loathsome because the person under it is compelled to work. That isn't so in this payment model - they're free to work or not as they wish, and they are free to choose the amount of work, and their own balance of pay vs working conditions, and so on.
I found a link but couldn't add it to my original comment. There is a 5% salary payment for 15 years once the student reaches $25k. Sandbagging is possible but it seems like students would start working against their own monetary self-interest pretty early (from a salary perspective at least; who knows, I'm sure there's other creative ways to game the system).
Australia has a version of this sort of thing, except the 'bank' extending the loan is the government. When a student graduates they repay their education 'loan' with a slightly increased rate of income tax until the loan is repaid in full. There are a couple of other features of the loans that make them different from commercial loans in that the effective rate of interest is 0% (it's tied to inflation, but no interest clock is ticking) and repayments are only required once a graduate reaches a certain income threshold (hence, if you leave the workforce and stop earning income you don't have to pay, and you don't pay if you are unemployed or seeking a job straight out of college).
Student Loans in the UK can work like this - you repay, I think, 9% above £25,000, and it's wiped after 30 years, regardless of how much is left. Some details may be different depending on exactly when the loan was issued.
So if you have a huge loan but a small income, it's more like a 30-year graduate tax than a loan you expect to fully repay.
I think the difference (if I'm understanding the U.K. situation correctly) is that in the U.K. the loan can be paid off in full prior to the end of the term, correct?
In the situation above, it acts more like an investment rather than a loan. (i.e., there's no upper bound on the payment, outside of the 5%/15 year cap, so the student may pay back more than they receive)
That's entirely the point. Tuition would have to come down so it's actually affordable, or there would be less people attending. Businesses might actually foot the bill for tuition to train their people, because there would be a shortage of qualified applicants.
Is the regulation you're speaking of regulation that un-does the regulation that provides federal loan to anyone with a pulse who wants to major in journalism (or some other degree for a low paid field) and prevents borrowers from getting rid of said loans in bankruptcy?
Make no mistake, we regulated ourselves into this mess. Many people at the time predicted the current situation. More money chasing something drives up the price of that something. It's now pretty clear that we should have funded the schools instead of providing subsidized loans for the students.
Universities are not just job training programs. They offer degrees that will enhance one's expertise in pretty much any sphere of human knowledge. If you want a job in accounting, don't get a degree in philosophy.
Why? If I take out a loan in order to go on a cruise, the cruise company is not responsible if I default. In fact, with almost every purchase that involves a loan, the company offering the loan is different than the company offering the product / service. If responsibility fell on the university, then they could just refuse to accept people who take out loans. The result being that only rich people could go to college.
>>Why? If I take out a loan in order to go on a cruise, the cruise company is not responsible if I default.
Imagine if everyone in the United States who wanted to go on a cruise was guaranteed to be given a loan to go on a cruise, regardless of the cost of said cruise or their personal circumstances. In that scenario, obviously cruise companies would increase prices, since their clients will always get the money to pay for them, and like you yourself said - it's not their responsibility whether people can pay it back or not.
It's a cultural touchstone, the signal that you've come of age! How dare you suggest that 18 year olds not take out a loan for a 6-month luxury cruise, or that they compare prices for different ships! You go on the best ship that has space for you, everyone knows that!
Because education is not a luxury service that can be postponed or outright skipped, like lifestyle-tailored tourism, and education costs in the US have become a major societal and economical problem.
> In fact, with almost every purchase that involves a loan, the company offering the loan is different than the company offering the product / service.
That's a tautology, and entirely misses the point. The point is that student loans are a colossal problem for the US, not only economical but also societal, and the problem is caused by the disconnection between the vicious cycle that leads to hikes in cost and the consequences of complying with the requirements to have an education.
Complaining that universities should not feel any consequence for the need to take massive loans they force onto their student body is like complaining that petrochemical companies should not feel any consequence for the need to decontaminate the environment.
Then taxpayers should pay for education itself. No reason for taxpayers to become lenders.
The real problem is voters want lower taxes, and some genius figured out a way to tout lower taxes and tax payer assistance to students, hence student loan debt.
And, inevitably, like all times that society is enabled to pass the buck onto future generations or ignore externalities, society will take and consume all it can until the breaking point. Same story with defined benefit pensions, student loans, environmental damage. We are simply starting to see the effects of pushing the costs into the future, now that the future is here.
> The real problem is voters want lower taxes, and some genius figured out a way to tout lower taxes and tax payer assistance to students, hence student loan debt.
Rather, university education in the U.S., like healthcare, is insanely expensive compared to other countries. Why is that?
1. Non-selective. We admit 70% of high school graduates to University whereas in Germany they admit 1/3.
2. Too long/unfocused. University education can last 5-6 years in the US for a bachelors, whereas in Germany it is limited to 3 years. You don't get to drift around as "undecided" and change your major, you apply to the school with a specific major. You don't get a lot of choice as to your electives and follow a pre-planned course of study (for the most part).
3. Too many frills. European schools don't have massive sports stadiums, athletic departments, or other amenities similar to US universities.
4. Too much staff. Our universities are massively overstaffed with everything from diversity officers to football coaches to teams of counselors.
Put this all together, and you have a very expensive, inefficient, gold-plated system focused on catering to student whims rather than to taxpayer efficiency. Of course tax payers don't want to pay for it -- why should they? If you want European style funding of universities, you need European-style spending levels and rigor. If you want an experience that is half as selective, takes twice as long, and offers absurd amenities that have nothing to do with university education, then you are going to have to pay for that out of your own pocket rather than asking for taxpayers to provide this experience for you.
The good news is that you can find relatively inexpensive higher education in the U.S. if you are a good student and are willing to attend community college for the first two years and a local state school for the rest. If you are good enough to be admitted to University in Europe, then in the U.S. you should be able to get a scholarship. Of course most US university students would never be admitted to University in Europe in the first place -- so having an option to pay a lot to go might be better than not having an option at all. But I suspect that we would be better off adopting a German style trade school system to absorb 50% of high school graduates as well as a more rigorous high school system, but that would require adoption of tracking and letting most students know that they are not going to be on the university track. In that type of environment, sure, taxpayers would be willing to fund the enterprise since they would only be spending 10% more than they are spending now to match German-level of tertiary education spending.
In France 100% of high school graduates are (by definition) admitted to University, and more than half of them indeed decide to take that path.
"Typical" university education lasts 5 years. (Though I wouldn't be surprised if only a minority actually makes it.)
It's mostly free, students from poor families get grants, though there are limits on how many times you can retry university years while still getting a grant.
The result : in 2014, 45% of the 25-34 year old French had a university (or other superior education) degree, compared to 28% of the Germans. (OTOH I suspect that the quality of that education is not nearly as good ?)
So France is an example where they spend 1.12% of GDP on tertiary education, about 12% more than Germany, and as a result they get a lot more university students, but their labor market overall is less skilled, and French schools -- similar to Italian schools -- are broke and their employees are paid less.
So these are the kinds of trade offs to make -- e.g. what percent of your labor force do you need to have a college degree? This is going to be a characteristic of your economy and providing college degrees to more people than this is going to create a skills mismatch.
A lot of people think the reverse is true -- e.g. that if you train a lot of people to build bridges, then you will have a bridge building economy. But I am of the opinion that knowledge is activity specific, so if you want to have a lot of people who are bridge builders, then you need to actually build bridges, and the university diplomas you need will follow as people scramble to learn how to build bridges to get the good bridge building jobs they see in the economy.
So why does Germany have a more skilled economy even though fewer attend university? Because it's an export monster, that swells the number of high skilled jobs needed to much more than would be the case if they were producing only for their own market.
China is in a similar position -- they want a hundred million engineers, and if that means building a bridge across every river in Africa then that's what they will do. The Belt and Road Initiative is nothing more than an attempt to export infrastructure because they've already covered their own country with empty apartment buildings, unnecessary airports, and so they need to build infrastructure elsewhere. Curiously only 5% of the population attend university in China, and yet they are an economic powerhouse by doing -- and learning by doing -- rather than academic diplomas.
India is an example where they overtrain lots of people in IT relative to domestic demand, and of course what happens is that people emigrate to where the jobs are. Again, you don't transform your economy with university education, anymore than you can transform your car by washing it. You transform your economy by cultivating productive ecosystems and then making sure there is demand for their output.
Whereas we in the US think that we can shut down manufacturing, outsource jobs, and yet have a high skilled economy if everyone goes to university. It's not the case, we have a much lower skilled labor force than Europe and the university graduates have a hard time finding good jobs and repaying their student loans.
So bottom line, the goal should not be to send everyone to college, but to send those people who need to go to college, and if you want more people to need to go, than work on cultivating more high skilled employment in your economy rather than building more universities.
IMHO jobs and economy are secondary. University is first and foremost about having educated citizens. And you can't do that in school because you need the freedom of not being forced to go to class and freedom from your parents too.
And in a lot of jobs, you don't need much more than some core knowledge, and being independent enough that you can learn on your own - you can't teach a specific job at the university, that's what internships are for. Teaching jobs, (outside of technical schools), is the responsibility of the companies.
Note that the overwhelming majority of engineers, especially bridge ones in France don't come from the University system - but rather the élite ingénieur schools - maybe a bit like the US Ivy League ?
(There's the super-élite school literally called "Bridges and Roads")
Those get a disproportionate amount of funding, but aren't that relevant to the discussion, since they only teach a tiny minority of students (~5%).
I recently came upon an interview with Oliver Faron, administrator of one of these élite schools, which has a specific focus on education of people returning to superior education. They also have an especially good record with 20 times better results with technical (="low-quality") high school graduates than universities.
(I guess that extra funding and the self-selection of the most motivated students might have something to do with that ?)
And his dream is to have a mandatory year of university to replace the long-gone mandatory military service, so that the different social classes get to "live together" again ! (More than one year would probably make for diminishing results?) :
https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/la-conversation-scien... (fr)
> IMHO jobs and economy are secondary. University is first and foremost about having educated citizens. And you can't do that in school because you need the freedom of not being forced to go to class and freedom from your parents too.
I sympathize with this view. When I was young (and foolish), I was really upset at how university education was being commoditized to teach job skills when really it should (in my opinion) follow the Classical Greek model of education designed to better a person -- the word for school also means "leisure". I also bemoaned the lack of intellectual curiosity and anti-intellectual atmosphere in universities, even elite universities.
But over time, I realized that this model of a university where you go and find yourself or discover the truth or become an enlightened person was fundamentally impossible as a method of national policy.
It is an indulgence for the elite which doesn't scale to 70% of the population, most of whom have zero desire to become intellectuals and are going to school so that they can have job skills. They need job skills. Why would we make them take out huge loans or waste a key portion of their lives role playing as intellectuals?
Moreover, it's really hard to teach young people insight about life because most of us are complete fools when we are young and all we get is the feeling of having deep insight into things, we don't really get that insight except by _doing_, whether that means engaging directly with the world via travel or talking to people outside our bubble, reading things that challenge us, experience life by having kids or watching a relative die, or whether that means doing on the job -- secluding yourself into a dream world on a walled off campus with a strictly controlled idealized environment is an indulgence that does not actually make you a more knowledgeable person.
In terms of an elite school offering superior results, that is always easy to do if you are selective. It's trivial to create a high school with much superior results than the average high school if you can pick out good students. The hard thing to do is to scale that to a national policy for everyone.
So if this secluded campus model of the university doesn't promote your intellectual life and it doesn't give you job skills, then why are we doing it?
There is a reason why the original schools were basically theological training institutions and later became finishing schools for the wealthy. That model of university education was always a type of bubble, but at least in the past, people were sent to the bubble because they were going to live in that bubble for the rest of their lives so the university was preparing them for their future life, either in a monastery or in elite circles where employment was considered a dirty word.
You wouldn't, like you weren't paying to do your military service.
> engaging directly with the world via travel or talking to people outside our bubble
A mandatory year mixing all social classes is, by definition, "bubble-popping". In fact this still happens today, when young people are forced to leave their home town they lived all their life in in order to go to the university.
Also, nothing is preventing a university from having some practical workshops... (I know a lot of people that got their truck-driving license during their military service) and a big university should be able to have some much more expensive training machinery than a small school.
P.S.: Oliv(i)er Faron is far from being young and foolish...
> You wouldn't, like you weren't paying to do your military service.
Who do you think pays for military service if not the people? Martians? What is the difference between generation X paying for generation X+1's education, spending g% more than what was paid for their own education, and generation X taking out a loan to pay for their education at a rate of r? The only thing that matters is whether r > g, the growth rate of the price of education. If r > g, then a direct transfer is slightly more efficient. If r < g, then a loan is more efficient. In this case, g is astronomically high. Yet you favor the more inefficient approach, because it hides the fact that most money spent on tertiary education is a waste, and you want this waste transferred to the old rather than kept by the young.
> engaging directly with the world via travel or talking to people outside our bubble
A mandatory year mixing all social classes is, by definition, "bubble-popping".
Ahh, yes, those isolated campuses with safe spaces and psychological violence counselors -- a true bubble popping experience.
> The facts don't support this claim. U.S. government spending on tertiary education is 0.91% of GDP compared to Germany's 1.0% and Japan's 0.45%
US voters aren’t comparing taxes with Japan and Germany. They’re voting between politician A who says they will lower taxes, and does it by removing funding for higher education or politician B, who does provide higher education and hence has to collect higher taxes and politician A. Politician A can get away with this by claiming they still support students by providing government loans or government guaranteed private loans or whatever, but they don’t have to account for it in the same way politician B does.
I agree with all of your points, and I far prefer the German model too. But American voters seem to love debt, and low taxes, and rarely is a thought given to the future.
Maybe American voters don't want to pay more for college education because they know how much it costs, and they feel they are already paying enough?
I think they are correct.
Reforming higher education means cutting spending first and foremost.
Shut down half the universities, lay off 1/3 of the staff in the rest, seize the endowments, close all the sports stadiums, fire most of the admins, force students to finish in 3 years, and then take the pile of money we are already spending on education and make that be the full tuition.
Voters concerned about high taxes would benefit from this, as would the top 50% of students. The bottom 50% of University students should be diverted to 2 year long trade schools, which can be built on the ruins of the shutdown universities, but staffed with craftsmen rather than professors. Industry can pay for 1/3 of it, students can pay for 1/3, and taxpayers can pay for the other third of the trade schools.
It's just one proposal, but generally trade school is much shorter and is usually a paid apprenticeship situation, or turns into one very quickly. If there is no apprenticeship, then sure can make it like Unis.
The tone is draconian because you have a whole class of people ripping students off, ripping taxpayers off, providing very little value, and yet being extremely sanctimonious about why more spending is needed. The hypocrisy and amorality of the higher education industry in the US is stunning, so a draconian approach is called for.
I whole-heartedly agree. But it's politically untenable, and not just because of unions and sports fans.
Any limit to university education in the US butts up with class (read: race) and inequality issues. I would love to close all of the over-priced and educationally dubious for-profit institutions. But any semblance that we are limiting educational attainment to the educational-haves is unacceptable.
The market for what HNers regard as an education (4-year degrees from established public or private universities) is really only like half of the post-secondary education market.
If you offer Johnny $20,000 to attend Purdue, you have to give everyone $20,000, regardless of their school-choice, aptitude, likelihood to graduate, or future income projections. To do so otherwise puts society in the unfortunate position of deciding who gets to pursue the American Dream.
> Reforming higher education means cutting spending first and foremost.
This has already occurred and continues to be cut further. What also happened however, is the legislature promised lenders that taxpayers would pay for all student loans. Of course this doesn’t get accounted in cash flow, because you can just assume more people will pay back their loans than actually will.
So now you have a situation where a lender can make a loan of unlimited amount of money with no risk to the lender, a borrower who knows nothing about money but has infinite ability to borrow, and a seller (schools) that get less money from taxpayers, but now can fight for the gobs of money that the students (who know nothing) have control of spending.
Hence unnecessary stadiums, recreational centers, buildings, admin, etc.
I don't think "reducing taxpayer funding" is the 'cutting spending' the parent comment meant. I think they meant actual reduction of admin, buildings, rec centers, etc.
Agreed. I think it is going away, or at least I can't imagine anyone being looked down upon if they say they are a carpenter, plumber, electrician, or mechanic. And nowadays these will make more money than your average university graduate.
I'm too lazy to do anything but a cursory search, but it looks like it breaks down like this for higher education spending, according to a 2015 report:
Federal: $75.6 billion
State: $72.7 billion
Local: $9.2 billion
Although the funding between State and Federal are similar, the way those funds are spent may be different:
"The federal government mostly provides financial assistance to individual students and funds specific research projects, while states typically fund the general operations of public institutions, with smaller amounts appropriated for research and financial aid."
"Education" is necessary up to a certain point. In America, up to highschool education is free and for the most part required. Why draw the line at a bachelors degree? Should Masters and PhDs be free and partially required? Based on how I framed the question I assume that you can tell that I draw the line at highschool education. I can however see the argument for raising it to bachelor's. However I would expect the government to do much more than just give free money. Rather they would regulate it like they do to highschool. For example, required courses in English literature, American history, PE, and science. Mandatory attendance. Nationwide standardized tests. And others ... I personally am glad that I finish all of that in highschool and I now have the freedom to choose what and how I study.
But to respond to your point directly, degrees such as gender studies, art history, and English literature are certainly a luxury service that can be postponed or outright skipped.
> Based on how I framed the question I assume that you can tell that I draw the line at highschool education.
I'm asking out of curiosity and not trying to make a point or win any argument: Why do you draw your line there?
I wouldn't combine "free" and "partially required" though, as I don't see the need to conflate them. Where I live Masters and PhDs are free, but your required education is completed at age 15. Everything after that is completely optional, but free.
as in no tuition, but there are some administrative fees and books you need to buy, etc.
I draw my line there because I know of many people who would have a very fulfilling career doing things that only require a high school education (such as cashiers, customer service representatives, and construction workers). I assume that those people also would not gain much from college since having knowing them in highschool, they do not gain that much from formal education (lack of motivation to study, lack of intelligence to understand basic topics, lack of interest is those subjects).
I guess I shouldn't have assumed that government would necessarily regulate college like they do high school. Some European countries are examples of that. However in those countries there are a lack of people who are qualified to work in highly educated fields and a surplus of blue collar workers. In the US the situation is reversed. There is not enough work for many liberal arts majors, but a lack of workers for blue collar jobs. Spending tax dollars educating people from jobs that lack workers to jobs that have a surplus is not good usage of the money. Furthermore, a person who is not fit for even free college (probably has a lower income) now has to pay taxes for college students (who probably will have a higher income [unless they can't find a job]) while not benefiting from it.
There are a lot of assumptions in there that I don't think are necessarily founded. Is knowing someone enough for you to make assumptions about whether they will gain much from higher education? That seems awfully judgmental to me.
I'll also add that this: "However in those countries there are a lack of people who are qualified to work in highly educated fields and a surplus of blue collar workers." is absolutely not the case in the European country where I live. When you talk about the state of "those countries", what countries are you talking about and what are you basing that statement on?
> Is knowing someone enough for you to make assumptions about whether they will gain much from higher education?
Yes, I make assumptions based on what I hear and who I see. I don't have the time to make a doctorate thesis on of my assumptions. Had I spent years researching how to identify people who college would help, and people who it would not help then I would use a stronger word than "assumption". With regard to countries offering free college education there are countries such as Germany, France and Brazil that offer free college education. They also have very low rates of attendance. Image how much lower it would be if the students had to pay for it.
I have a bachelors degree in biomedical engineering, complete waste of time and money. All it has really provided me is a piece of paper that says I am smart
A better approach would be to draw the line at the actual skills and knowledge that we believe everybody in the society must possess, and then figure out how to structure the educational system around that - i.e. what does it even mean to "have a degree", what kinds there are, what's the difference between college and trade school etc. It's quite likely that the existing structure is not at all optimal.
This is part of the issue. Loan providers pretty much have to give everyone loans. But the only way this can happen is by guaranteeing these loans, federally and legally. So our solution to a problem backfired and we found out that federally guaranteed loans aren't the solution to "college should be available to everyone." Maybe it is time to look for a different solution. And maybe time to clean up the mess that the last "solution" created.
> So our solution to a problem backfired and we found out that federally guaranteed loans aren't the solution to "college should be available to everyone."
This was already known, but since simply providing taxpayer funded education results in increases of government expenses and hence higher taxes, we of course went with the Byzantine route of indebting people who don’t even know what amortization is to the tune of tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars.
I don't think its unrealistic for an 18 year old to understand debt. Also, how are they being tricked into hundreds of thousands of dollars of ? State schools start around 15k/year and provide bachelors degrees. I've never understood these stories of people graduating (non-PhD/Lawyer)with so much debt
> I don't think its unrealistic for an 18 year old to understand debt
It really shouldn't be, but here we are. The proof is in the pudding. Their high school education has failed them, parental and job market pressures to have a degree has failed them.
Just standing around and going "well they should have known" isn't going to solve anything. Eventually they're going to be a big enough voting bloc to pass something like debt relief (example: old people and unsustainable pensions) and who's going to be stuck holding the bag? Better to solve the problem as early as possible instead of just standing around blaming them and not fixing anything.
I didn't claim they were tricked, I think anyone that comes graduates high school should be able to understand amortizations and model cash flows in a spreadsheet so they now how much they need to earn to pay for their loans. But they don't. And neither do their parents. And a few clicks later, they are given $50k+/year to go to whatever "school" they want.
> how are they being tricked into hundreds of thousands of dollars of [debt]
> state schools start around 15k/year and provide bachelors degrees.
Problem 1: School is expensive
15k*4 = 60k (assuming you do 4 years and not the average time of 6 years). So we're pretty close to $100k of debt. That is just in-state tuition! But that's not the total cost of school. Berkeley[0] estimates about $30k/yr for a student. So that's 120k-180k of debt for a bachelors. Now double that if you're out of state.
Problem 2: School is getting more expensive
But there's another problem that's happening. Cost of tuition is skyrocketing. Let's look at Berkeley from 2003-2012[1]. In 2003 the cost was $4336 (adjusting for inflation today that's ~$6050). In 2012 the cost was $12,834 ($14,340 2019 dollars). Today it is $14,184. So in 20 years the price has about increased ~2.5x. This means that those cases of $100k+ debt are increasing not just in total number (because population increase) but as a percent of graduating students (we'll say Gaussian curve of debt distribution).
Problem 3: In-State isn't always the best option
Let's say we live in Washington (state) and want to go to school for computer science. The field is fairly competitive so the higher ranked school we go to yields likely a better education (one up to date with modern techniques, funding, and equipment) and more network connections. So we'll say that we want to get into a top 100 school. That actually only leaves us 2 schools: UW(#6) and WSU(#75). We graduated pretty well with a 3.9 and a 1400 on our SAT. That might not get us into UW ([3] says 33% chance we don't get in) because it is a (inter)nationally competitive school and we don't have really any extra curricular activities. So what do we do? Our scores are high enough to get into a top 20, worst case top 50. Do we go to WSU or go to a school with more resources and a higher chance of earning more in the future? And if you think this is a fictitious scenario, play around with the other school acceptances (website uses same naming pattern as usnews: e.g. University-Of-California--Berkeley), UW is one of the least competitive schools in the top 20. There's plenty of states with even larger gaps. There's plenty of states where we're more competitive than the top instate school. There's plenty of other reasons a student might want to go out of state, and plenty of reasons that might be the best option for them.
Problem 4: Age
We're also talking about 18 year olds, which aren't known for making the best decisions. I don't know about you, but when I was 18 I was an idiot. I'm still pretty dumb but I've learned a lot since then. And if you don't think you were an idiot at 18, I'm calling bs or that you're under 23 and just don't know it yet.
Wow, I didn't realize how messed up the West Coast is. In the midwest we can go to state school for ~15k/year total cost and get a job pretty much anywhere as long as the gpa is ~3.2. CS students I graduated wit are in everything from Big Tech to startups, some even branched out into biotech. I always assumed a West Coast school mad it even easier to land a job
Maybe partially state/federal funded education programs or free college education is the solution. We have that in Europe with some limits (only the first degree can be free) and it's working just fine. If you want private education and you can pay for it, that's fine.
> with some limits (only the first degree can be free)
Some countries do, some don't. I know several people with two free master's degrees, and some people basically collect them and PhDs as a hobby through their lifetimes -- a very small minority obviously, as most are quite done after the first.
> In fact, with almost every purchase that involves a loan, the company offering the loan is different than the company offering the product / service.
I suspect this isn't true. Amazon puts up some pretty intrusive financing offers on all kinds of products. Jewelry is commonly purchased with vendor financing. Electronics are commonly purchased with vendor financing. Cars are usually purchased with vendor financing.
It's true that such vendor financing may be technically offered through a separate corporate form, but I don't think a company created by a retailer in order to offer financing specifically and exclusively on that retailer's products really counts as a "different company" in any real sense.
Lenders are no longer on the hook defaulting student loans. These loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy, and it reflects on the sheer amount of loans given to sub-prime borrowers.
If I take out a loan in order to go on a cruise, the cruise company is not responsible if I default.
Aside from the other points, this isn't an honest of the overall situation of industries and credit. For example, The real estate industry and the car industry are highly focused on the buyer's ability to pay. The company might not be legally responsible for a buyer who defaults and it may a different company making the loan but the entire industry has to take a hit and they avoid taking those hits when they can (periodic easy-credit situations can distort this but still).
Which is to say that the government giving student guaranteed credit for school certainly distorts things relative to other industries (even compared to housing, where the government is also involved heavily).
In my experience, those two industries are highly focused on the buyer’s ability to qualify for the loan and much, much less concerned with the ability to pay the loan.
What I read and heard in the past few weeks about this hints at another solution. Instead of getting rid of student loans and college tuition fees, we need to improve the situation for students and open the market for other players.
Apparently the Department of Education chooses the loan service for borrowers, thus enabling a de-facto monopoly for Navient [0]. Now, if we had a functioning market people could choose better solutions, and better standards would prevail. Also data could be made public enabling students to choose a college that showed better performance for graduates careers [1].
The fact that we have to look at education from the perspective of whether or not we can find a job contributing to the coffers of rich executives is remarkably warped.
Education should be done for educations sake. Actual bullshit degrees come from universities seeking profit over education and even if you removed government loans from the equation they would still exist.
The idea that everything would somehow be fixed if loans were removed is a delusional one as long as there is a profit motivation for universities. Because it's easy to create McDegrees and sell them.
Depends how you implement the UK';s system is basically a graduate tax which seems fairer.
I suspect that Labours ideas of scraping it will just lead to higher taxes for all ie poorer non graduates subsidising middle calss kids, or they will ration degree places
Why would it be just "poor non-graduates" subsidising "middle class kids"?
An potential extra tax burden can be allocated from wherever the government sees fit. Like a digital services tax or closing loopholes that are conveniently left open for global corporations.
Do you worry that the healthy poor people are subsidising the middle class sick ones through the NHS? Or that poor careful drivers are subsidising the cost of accidents for the middle class careless ones via their insurance company?
Though it's less direct than the NHS benefit, I think it's a pretty good argument that everyone benefits from an educated society, even if you can't point at every single person with a degree and say they're contributing to the greater good.
Educated people design infrastructure, products, services, (public and private) that affects every aspect of everyone's life.
I feel like this would be unfair on non-graduates, but only because government support for alternative career paths is so poor (e.g. apprenticeship schemes are a joke in this country). But really nobody should be entering working life in debt.
The brighter side is when the shit hits the fan both the universities and bullshit degree holders will be the losers. Economy will recover in a few years and we will have a better economy.
Some of it is making up for state cuts. For example, between 2008 and 2018 Louisiana reduced high education funding by about $5k per student. Even if LSU didn't "Raise their tuition" that $5k gap needs to be made up somewhere.
State cuts have made a huge difference, especially in the UC system. When I went to UCSD in 1982, tuition was roughly $310/quarter for a full-time student ($825 in 2019 dollars). California contributed roughly 90% of the cost of a student, keeping fees manageable. I was able to earn enough each summer to pay for tuition.
Now California contributes roughly 30% to the cost of a student, and the costs themselves has risen (better accommodations, increased admin staff etc etc.)
I keep thinking about the circa 1991 recession. Everything was cheap. Everyone was poor. Everyone was happy living a basic life. Cause there was no other choice.
It seems like the majority of the commenters here are missing the point. The increasing rate of student loan default is not a result of kids who go to a four year college, graduate with an unmarketable degree in philosophy, fall on hard times and then can’t pay their bills. It's kids who go to barber or cosmetology school, take on $30k of debt, then realize they don't make enough money cutting hair to support themselves, much less pay back a loan. There's a huge population of people like that.
Source: https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-department-educati...
Sure, the most relatable problem is that a lot of college grads have debts they can't pay off.
That's not really the focus of the article though, which is an introduction to a potentially calamitous systemic problem.
The 2008 crash happened because there were about $1.7T of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) floating around in the financial system. These were essentially sliced up pieces of numerous mortgages that had been made to credit-unworthy home buyers. When these buyers started defaulting due to a weak economy, the MBS became worthless and financial institutions started going belly up.
So with that said, here are a few facts:
- There's about $1.6T of outstanding student loan debt today, and it's growing.
- Many of the borrowers who took out these loans are demonstrably credit-unworthy, as the .gov link demonstrates, they are already defaulting in growing numbers.
- Sure enough there's a thing called SLABS out on the market (Student Loan Asset Backed Securities). Very similar to a MBS but the collateral is student loans.
I don't know how widely SLABS are spread throughout the financial system at this point.
There are also differences vs 2008, biggest one is that most of the student loan debt is government guaranteed.
That last point gets used to promote SLABS but it seems to me that it just makes their value leveraged to political winds. Here is an example scenario: economy softens, leading many holders of student loan debt to vote for Bernie Sanders because he promises to forgive their debt. He gets elected and follows through on his promise. SLABS all over the system become worthless, banks end up much poorer than they thought they were, and the death spiral begins again.
I don't know what will happen, you can't simplify the workings of the economy into tweets and soundbites. But there is certainly cause for attention and concern.
Right, so the difference here is that you can be foreclosed on, and the bank takes your house. You can even go bankrupt when you lose your house.
But you can't get out of student loan debt via bankruptcy, nor lose the education. I figure the banks figure they're going to be fine, because rather than the SLABS market collapsing, it'll just suffer a correction: the enforced debt peonage of making payments all one's life will ensure those "securities" represent (forcibly and fraudulently extracted) income streams.
Except that all of those angry debtors can vote, and elect representatives who change the applicable laws. So one way things are different this time around is that government action could precipitate events in unpredictable ways.
Remember Bernie is talking about straight up forgiveness: the debt just disappears. He probably won't be the next President but student loan reform (including existing loans) is a hot topic for many candidates.
Any forgiveness is likely to be executed by the forgiving entity paying off the loans.
The federal government is not going to use a pen to steal trillions of dollars from lenders holding contracts for repayment. That’s a banana republic action.
If we're being cynical, I think they would forgive the debt and bail out any large financial institutions who are damaged by the act of doing so. It would be very in character.
> Remember Bernie is talking about straight up forgiveness: the debt just disappears.
I don't think this would harm the financial system. Debt held by the govt disappears, privately held debt is purchased by the federal government and then disappears.
I don't know the structure of student loan backed debt but this sounds the opposite of the cataclysmic: the government is guaranteeing they will "print" all the money needed to cover debt owed to 3rd parties, which should mean banks will do better than ever.
I'd be more concerned of cataclysmic outcomes if we changed laws in a way that fundamentally shift the risk profile of student debt as held by 3rd parties
> He probably won't be the next President
He IS a top polling primary candidate, but more to the point I don't think even a democratic Congress would pass a lot of his policy
Also to supply some context for those numbers (this is probably way too simple and wrong in some way though)
The size of the US economy in 2008 (US GDP) was around $20T. There were $1.7T of MBS. That's about 8.5% of the economy which mostly didn't exist, it was all debt for which the collateral was a fiction because the borrowers didn't have the money to pay off their mortgages.
The size of the US economy today is around $25T. So student loans are around 6.4% of the economy at present (and growing) and that money may mostly not exist either, because we know these borrowers are having real problems paying and the economy isn't even doing all that poorly at the moment.
You’re not comparing equivalent quantities. GDP is an annual figure (Gross Domestic Product), and you are comparing it to total outstanding debts that are paid off over decades.
Total asset value of the US economy is about $270T with about $150T in outstanding debt. So the relative proportions are not as extreme as you’re representing.
If it disappears "overnight", then would the right comparison be to daily GDP? which would increase the computed percentages by a factor of 365.
Clearly it is not sensible to compare two quantities with different dimensions of $ and $/time. It is like comparing distance (miles) to speed (miles/hr). Changing units to (meters/sec) doesn't change the absurdity in any way.
Speaking has someone who co-runs a hair salon, those numbers don't make sense. $30K should be a reasonable loan compared to how much a single stylist can make annually (easily $50K, up to six figures if they are any good). Just shopfitting a hair salon costs $10-20K. New or relocating salons do that routinely and will expect to recoup it comfortably in the first year.
Maybe in some high end markets or very high end or speciality salons, but I'm having a very, very hard time seeing an average stylists making 50k, let alone six figures(!!) anywhere I've ever lived. The BLS says that the 2018 median pay is $24,830 per year.
FWIW all my peers that I went to high school with who got their cosmetology license 1) did so for free as our public education system offers cosmetology school for free and 2) no longer are practicing 20 years later
That average will be brought by junior stylists, but someone who goes to college shouldn't start as a junior (or only for a very short time). Juniors are usually the ones who start at 16 with no training at all. They're not allowed to do anything more complicated than making coffee for the customers and washing hair, and are paid accordingly.
Also not all stylists work full time because it's a relatively well-paid job. One of the colleagues at the salon I was talking about has worked a 3 day week for years, and another works 2 days a week (but she does have another job).
On your other point about older hairstylists, it's a very physical job where you stand in an awkward pose for long hours. Many retire (or semi-retire into salon ownership and doing occasional special customers) by their 50s.
They do. In my state you can do a 2 year apprenticeship in cosmetology, but they can be hard to come by. You need to find a stylist willing to not only train you in practical aspects but follow your bookwork and write/grade tests. It's a two-year unpaid commitment. My wife owns a salon and has taken on a couple apprentices. It is a considerable amount of work. Alternatively a beauty school program can be done in a year, then after a six month internship you can get your license. The apprenticeship is the better option but being able to complete your training in a shorter amount of time with a lower barrier to entry is probably appealing.
In Japan you need to do a 2 year course before starting as a hair stylist. In the UK anyone can set up (although they may have difficulty getting insurance so will probably be operating without).
Regulatory capture. In many states the industry successfully lobbied for licensing requirements on the (questionable) basis of it being necessary for public health.
While the basis for regulation makes sense on paper anyone who's done anything with a low margin service industry knows that whether good practices are followed in a particular workplace has almost nothing to do with education (everyone knows how to keep things clean) and everything to do with management (does management actually want these things done or does it consider them a waste of time).
Anecdotal counterpoint - I have an MS degree in information security from a top-tier engineering school that cost me $70k, am gainfully employed, and still have quite a difficult time paying this debt off. So no, this isn't universally true.
welcome to the rent seeking effects of occupational licensing, where you have to put more hours to do hair than be an EMT in some areas. either to pad the pockets of those providing the "education" or those in the industry looking to keep competition low.
I would love to see how many of these loans go towards low wage jobs all because licensing issues force people into this racket
An apple can cost $30k if someone is willing to pay it. I’m sure there are more reasonable prices, many community colleges are far cheaper.
Problem is 18 year old that down know how to do a simple cash flow analysis being given tens of thousands of dollars as they see fit, as long as it’s at a “school”, however that’s defined. Obviously the “schools” have figured out how to best benefit from the hydrant of money available to them.
For a lot of the programs through the public school system you need to enroll as a junior in high school. So if you don't choose that career by the ripe old age of 16 or 17 then public school isn't an option. A high school senior who decides to go into cosmetology only has the option of paying for school or finding a two-year unpaid apprenticeship.
Average BA holders in the US graduate with $28,000 in debt, versus $21,000 in Sweden. The Swedish system is basically like our income-based-repayment, which we have had since the 1980s. Except, as you’d expect with Sweden, there is less paperwork and fewer gotchas. Simply tweaking the PAY-E system Obama created, to add automatic enrollment and automatic annual income verification based on tax returns, would get us a system that has proven workable in Europe. All without trillion dollar loan forgiveness or radical changes. (And with, in my opinion, a fairer system of redistribution, where those who needed loans and got high paying jobs subsidizing those who needed loans but didn’t get high paying jobs.)
(And simply tweaking ACA would get us pretty close to the Dutch model of health insurance. But that doesn’t get headlines.)
When making comparisons with Sweden or other countries the cost of healthcare, housing, food, and transportation should be taken into account. Healthcare and transportation costs are much higher in the U.S. I think too we also have a higher per capita income and I don't know how things balance out. One thing for sure though. I'd rather be poor in Sweden than in the U.S.
There is also the fact that many students who start a four year degree end up never graduating. At the college I teach at it is clear that we are marketing to students who should not be going to college and shouldn't realistically expect to get a degree. But we need the money due to lack of state support and as a result standards for passing have gone down. What we have now is a system that has the incentives in the wrong place and this will have bad societal consequences years from now.
Like almost everyone else who comments on this topic I have ideas on how to make things better and like almost everyone else those ideas are largely naive.
Why is the cost of living relevant when you’re talking about debt levels? The point is simply that our debt levels aren’t that unmanageable, and we could achieve something very close to the Swedish student loan system by simply automatically enrolling people in repayment plans we already have.
Moreover, American cost of living is the same in Sweden as in the US (the GDP per capita in nominal dollars is identical to the figure in purchasing-power-adjusted dollars). You may need a car, but housing is cheaper in most of the country.
As to healthcare, making comparisons is difficult. 2/3 of college graduates have employer subsidized healthcare. For those people, you need to look at the median employee premium portion, which is $2,200/year. (There are also out-of-pocket costs, mostly for drugs, but the US figure of about $1,000 is not much different than the Swedish figure of $800 on that front).
The employee premium paid by the typical college graduate is much less than the extra taxes that same person would pay in Sweden. The median college graduate earns $51,000 in the US to start. The median employee premium of $2,200 is 4.4% of that. The tax differential is almost certainly higher than that. (In Sweden, all of that is taxed at 30% county tax, no federal. In the US, the first $12,000 is tax free, and the rest is taxed at 10-12% federal, plus maybe 4-5% state and local, plus 7.65% FICA).
You wrote: The point is simply that our debt levels aren’t that unmanageable,...
The cost of living is important as this and income level determines the affordability of debt. Just comparing income level and debt level between the two countries is not a deep enough analysis in order to determine if your proposed fix would work.
You are also ignoring the fact that a large number of people who go to college never graduate. These people are completely absent from your analysis of the problem. You are focusing only on the set of college graduates of both countries. I suspect that the rate of college completion for those who enroll at least one semester is much higher in Sweden than in the U.S.
According to your post 1/3 of U.S. college graduates don't have employer subsidized healthcare. This is a huge percentage and you are ignoring them in your analysis of relative debt burden.
Taxes are higher as a percent in Sweden than in the U.S. but in the U.S. at a moment's notice you can get screwed financially really bad in ways that you can't in Sweden. An ambulance ride in the U.S. costs much more than in Sweden and yearly out of pocket expenses for healthcare is much higher. The necessity of a car causes most people in the U.S. to have auto loans and unplanned maintenance costs can send people over the financial precipice.
I suggest that merely looking at the numbers you have does not give a clear picture of the relative situation in both countries.
Why would transportation costs be higher in the US? Gasoline is two times cheaper in the US than in Sweden. Food is roughly the same price, depending of what you eat.
Public transportation is very bad in the U.S. Even in major cities. For the vast majority of people a car is a necessity in the U.S. Most Americans end up in debt to buy a car. Then there is insurance and the opportunity cost of the government having to spend a great deal of money on road maintenance that could otherwise be spent on things like education.
European cities have much higher population density, and the lower personal income (often via higher taxes and, ironically, worker protection laws) changes the tradeoff between driving and taking pub trans, so more people take the bus. The tradeoff is that a lot of people live in small boxes.
And european governments have plenty of bs job creation engines like roadwork, too.
Would be nice to have some data. One related observation, that seems less surprising the longer I live here, is that europe has no spacex, google, tesla, nasa, coherent mars rovers, the list goes on... if you give people stuff, they're mostly just afraid someone's going to take it away. But yeah, to echo someone else's comment, I'd rather be poor, or even average, in Europe. I guess being super wealthy here wouldn't be that bad either, since nobody's nipping at your heels.
> europe has no spacex, google, tesla, nasa, coherent mars rovers, the list goes on...
The European Space Agency, Airbus, a huge number of car manufacturer, ...
It's not surprising that the #1 economy in the world has more big company than the #3 one (when they decide to group). A lot can be said also about the American culture and politics when it comes to entrepreneurship. But presenting Europe like its devoid of any important industry is also outright false :) .
On that second point, a perspective note for non-US people who don't realize: Sweden has about the same geographic area as just California. Only covers about 5% of the whole contiguous US.
Transportation costs for most individuals are related to density at a city level, not a nation level, so I don’t see the relevance of comparing density of a nation.
>At the college I teach at it is clear that we are marketing to students who should not be going to college and shouldn't realistically expect to get a degree.
It seems like almost all 4yr colleges do this to some extent nowadays. Freshman lecture halls with 500+ students and one adjunct faculty ratio are a money maker. Capstone classes with 40 students and one tenured professor are a money loser. You'd have to hire really bad bean counters to miss the obvious way to exploit that situation for monetary gain.
That may be so, but doesn't necessarily imply that health care is more expensive in the US. It's possible that in the US they simply spend more money on useless things, or do more screenings with better technology, for example.
> It's possible that in the US they simply spend more money on useless things, or do more screenings with better technology
These are both components to saying that the health care system is more expensive in the US.
> a rich country could spend more money on health care and still have worse average health than poorer countries
Yes. I think that multiple people on this thread would argue that this is the case with the US.
> many health outcomes may also depend on wealth - for example over-consumption leading to obesity, which might affect health more than spending on health care can compensate.
This implies that differences in social services and urban design have an impact on healthcare spending. This is relevant to /u/sykick's statements "the cost of healthcare, housing, food, and transportation should be taken into account." and "I'd rather be poor in Sweden than in the U.S."
"> It's possible that in the US they simply spend more money on useless things, or do more screenings with better technology
These are both components to saying that the health care system is more expensive in the US."
Sorry, but that doesn't make sense. If the service is better, the higher price is justified. Presumably you can always choose to not use the better technology to save money.
"This implies that differences in social services and urban design have an impact on healthcare spending."
How does it imply that? More social services would stop people from overeating? Do you have a citation for that?
In Sweden, you pay taxes for healthcare and everyone receives healthcare.
In the USA, you pay taxes for healthcare, but only the old and the poor receive that tax funded healthcare. So the average taxpayer has to buy their own health insurance in addition.
The linked chart also shows a clear correlation with Purchasing Power Parity, which also should be accounted for.
Also government employees, and those under the care of the VA.
> Purchasing Power Parity, which also should be accounted for.
Yes, I agree.
To illustrate with a simplified example:
Imagine nation A has median wage of $20k and nation B has median wage of $40k. Also imagine that their income distribution is the same. Then, if healthcare costs in nation B are twice as high, healthcare is equally as affordable.
" So the average taxpayer has to buy their own health insurance in addition."
How the money is collected is pretty irrelevant (indirectly via taxes or directly by the insurance company or physician). What matters is the overall cost.
It is relevant due to the complexity and uncertainty imposed. When I lived in the US, I didn't have a way of learning how much an interaction with a medical system would cost me. Now that I live in the UK, I do.
It could be that richer countries simply have more money to spend on health care, so why wouldn't they spend it.
On the other hand many health outcomes may also depend on wealth - for example over-consumption leading to obesity, which might affect health more than spending on health care can compensate.
In that example, a rich country could spend more money on health care and still have worse average health than poorer countries.
Not saying that is exactly what is going on, just that it makes sense to be careful with judging.
Another question perhaps is who pays taxes - another source I found said 2/3rds of voters in Sweden get their money from the state, either because they are government employees or recipients of welfare.
So an average tax rate might also be misleading, if many don't pay taxes at all.
Why was it necessary to change student loans to being non-dischargeable in bankruptcy? That is a recent change and it shifts the burden from banks having to evaluate the loans they are making which would likely mean fewer loans and thus less money earned from interest. It seems like student loans should be treated like any other unsecured loan. And really student loans shouldn’t even be necessary for public universities but that’s another point.
Because it is an unsecured loan. It would be too easy for a newly minted graduate to declare bankruptcy, discharge the loan, and move on with their life. The only entity stupid enough to loan money to students in that world would be the government.
I think you're using the word "risk" idiosyncratically. Student loans are unsecured, and most people are done with them by the time they're 23. If they're dischargeable in bankruptcy, for a lot of people, it's irrational not to default on them; the bankruptcy is gone long before your credit history matters.
That sounds nice but it requires there to be a definition of "societally high-reward education". That is difficult. Even if you find some methodology to identify the quality programs that have an appropriate "societal reward" you have to deal with the problem that the costs for those programs will inevitably rise in lock step to the amount of tax dollars used to subsidize them. (See https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff...)
I would suggest the federal government get out of educational loans entirely. Let the private loan market evaluate and take the risks, probably with an income based repayment contract that favored degrees/programs that are likely to lead to reasonable incomes.
Who knows? Like I said that is a difficult decision and I'd rather those decisions be made by individuals. They can decide if taking out a loan to get an English degree is worthwhile. And if they can't find someone to loan them the money, they may have find a different approach.
The more you "favor" particular degrees, the faster you you saturate the market with new graduates. The eventual outcome being those jobs are no longer in high demand, nor pay a decent salary
Yep. That is called "the market". And I think the government shouldn't get in the way and "favor" anything. Let people decide their own careers and interests and let them balance the pros and cons.
The loan programs don't adjust the interest rates for the risk/reward involved. As a taxpayer I don't want to fund someone for 4 years in college and then have them default or be be unqualified for a job that would make them self sufficient.
I'd rather have non of my tax dollars allocated that way, but if I don't have a choice then there should be some attempt to invest in people and skills that produce self-sufficient citizens.
I'm guessing long-term unsecured debt in five to six figure amounts is ordinarily really hard for an 18- to 22-year-old to get, no matter what they're spending it on, and if they somehow manage it the interest rate would be very high. Making it non-dischargeable was likely intended to fix those problems. (not saying it's a good idea, but I'd imagine that was the plan)
>Why was it necessary to change student loans to being non-dischargeable in bankruptcy?
To keep interest rates on student loans low and to make sure the loans are available to 18 year olds with no credit history.
There was a real problem with medical students racking up huge sums, declaring bankruptcy when they were making low money during residency, but then making 6 figure salaries a few years later.
>It seems like student loans should be treated like any other unsecured loan.
Nobody loans 18-22 tens of thousands (and 22-26 years olds hundreds of thousands of dollars) in unsecured loans.
And look at the interest rates for other unsecured loans. My credit card rate is 19%. Earnest gave me LIBOR + 3% on 200,000 dollars of student loans.
But federal student loan interest rates aren't low. Undergrads' loan options are determined by their parents' income, regardless of whether their parents are providing financial assistance. Graduate students can't take out subsidized loans at all anymore, even if they are on food stamps.
My loan rates are 6.55%. After 10 years of continuous school, that really, really adds up. I even had scholarships but they wouldn't cover my dorm, the mandatory meal plan, or summer classes so that I could finish undergrad faster. I looked to refinance with 3-4 different companies, like SoFi, but the lowest they offered was around 7% despite my very good credit score.
6.55% is low for an unsecured loan to someone without assets. Unsecured loans to people with good credit that can be discharged in bankruptcy have rates that are 3x that.
The person to whom you are replying is referring to the poorly-named Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA) of 2005. That law expanded the exemption from discharge in bankruptcy of student loans to be any student loan, including privately-issued student loans, not just ones issued by the government through a federal or state program.
This is why you see companies like SoFi running around offering screamingly low rates on student loans. Because they are private, those companies need not offer any of the protections a government loan offers (income-based repayment, forbearance options in the event of loss of income or disability, and so on) but retain the power to garnish tax refunds and the loans cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
The switch to non-dischargeable loans came along with cutting banks out of the federal student loan system. Non-dischargeable loans are issued and owned by the Department of Education, and only them.
This predated that change. Sallie Mae use to directly fund student loans, now Navient only manages them for the Dept. of Ed.
Edit: forgot to say non-dischargable goes back way before that switch. I have personal experience around 2001, but I'm pretty sure it goes back to the 80's.
> And really student loans shouldn’t even be necessary for public universities but that’s another point.
Set aside the education component entirely. It costs money to be housed, fed, entertained, and consume other things. That’s getting paid for somehow and that somehow is often borrowing for undergrads.
>Why was it necessary to change student loans to being non-dischargeable in bankruptcy?
I believe it was something along the lines of people borrowing for law degrees then discharging the debt right after graduation with the knowledge gained from their new degree. I'm sure it was done in other degrees as well.
Except in the subprime debacle, millions of people could declare bankruptcy and walk away. With student loans. The debtors are simply screwed with no recourse. That’s a big difference.
Even if that were the case, declaring bankruptcy at the age of 23 doesn't really make the future easier. Doing so in your 40s is easier one could argue because you'd had more connections and life experience, in a sense.
Here's the thing... when you do it en mass, it doesn't matter if it's illegal because nobody can do anything to stop you. It's called a strike.
Apparently the people that started http://rollingjubilee.org/ were originally working on a student debt strike project. Not sure exactly why they switched to a medical debt project, but it's certainly a worthy one.
There are no "lenders of government guaranteed loans" anymore, and there haven't been for at least nine years. Either the government is the lender, or it is a completely private (and dischargeable) loan.
However I still have a government guaranteed loan that was issued by a bank. If I default on it that bank isn't selling my account. They'll garnish my wages. Also I never plan on paying off my loan early! It's only 2.25% apr! I got lucky. Rates were really really low when I graduated and consolidated my loans.
I only mentioned them because I was googling for student debt strike projects and I'd heard of them before. The jubilee project is a form of mutual aid and less a strike.
The point of a strike is to build power for the striking class so that the creditor class is forced to make significant concessions up to and including relieving all of it. To be clear, this would mean huge numbers of people simply stop paying in a coordinated and public fashion.
If they stop paying government student loans en masse and then hid thier income (get paid and work cash only) all that would happen is our current trillion dollar deficit might increase a little bit. The government budget takes into account payments and interest from these loans. The total amount of all the loans is likely spread across repayments over 20 years.
That's a really great argument for free education, which is an argument the strikers would make. I do think though that you are underestimating the power ordinary people have. If the various funding mechanisms suddenly go into crisis, this will cause a very large ruckus with the potential for positive change.
"Student debt has surpassed $1 trillion partly because it is one of the most protected forms of debt by federal law. Student debtors can rarely discharge their loans in bankruptcy and lenders have rights to garnish wages and social security payments. The vast majority of student loans have these federal guarantees. We cannot buy these loans because there is no secondary market."
Yes. To default just don't pay. What I think you meant to ask was is there a way to escape repayment (get the debts wiped out in bankruptcy). Yes. It is possible to ask and get a judge to wipe out the student debt loan but the bar is usually fairly high and unlikely. Can it be done en masses or exploited. Not likely. You'd likely need Congress' involvement. Good luck with that and good luck with Devos.
I have wondered if the right person in the right place could go Mr Robot on the Dept of Education’s loan data, nuking all borrower data (prod, backups, everything). “Non Congressional Sanctioned Forgiveness” thought experiment.
Assuming that is a legitimate question: No. That data resides in many places... with the loan servicers, the NSLDS, the Guarantors... spread in locations around the country.
My wife and I lived a very simple lifestyle for years (7ish) after college so we could pay off student loan debt. Awesome Ford Tempo car, local honeymoon, Studio apt for first 5 years, limited eating out. She has a masters (more loans), and is a teacher. So that made it even tighter.
Is there any data on if folks with student loans are living above their means? I.e new TV’s, new car lease, vacations, ordering out.
I am serious when I ask, as I read a ton, and can’t get to the root. I hear many different anecdotes. This is a serious problem, and I am truly out of sync on the main causes of payback ailment.
Depending on when you graduated, a couple of things changed:
- college pricing increased (duh), so a loan balance for a comparably situated student will just be higher for recent grads
- median incomes for college graduates have risen a lot slower than the increase in college costs, so repayment will be more difficult at the median. (Even in engineering, this is true. Starting software engineering salaries ca. 1996 were in the range of 1.5x all-in fees for a year at a top private college. This ratio has moved decisively against students. Carnegie Mellon is quoting $74k for a year of education now, so the ratio is closer to 1.1x. Obviously it's easier to pay back loans if you earn more relative to the cost of the education. The numbers will be worse for people not pursuing a select few STEM degrees.)
- employee health insurance premiums are frequently on top of these numbers, making the arithmetic worse for payback.
- I'm sure there are other factors, especially when you add that some students go on to pursue fields (e.g. law) where similar dynamics are at play as well.
So yeah, it's worse now than it was even a couple decades back.
Currently, average BA graduates have $28k in debt. $400 a month will pay that off in roughly 7 years, depending on the interest rate on the loan.
Frugal living (aka sharing a studio apartment with a spouse, not eating out or making luxury purchases) makes that entirely doable, probably faster. OTOH, living above your means or lots of unexpected expenses (pet health care, personal health care, car maintenance, etc) can put that out of reach pretty quickly as well.
That reminds me, I forgot the other big item. Housing costs have risen tremendously. (Yes, even in places that are not the biggest cities and/or on a coast.)
Basically: all the financial factors that changed, changed against new graduates. I'm struggling to think of a meaningful expense that is relatively lower now than it was in 1996, and I can't think of any.
I'm not saying it's not doable at all. I'm just saying that 20 years ago that $28k in debt might have been $14k instead, the $400 might have been $200, housing + other expenses would have been lower, and the graduate's relatively higher salary would have made the arithmetic easier.
Put another way: if one had to share a studio apartment with a spouse to make the math work in 1996, consider how much worse the picture would be today for e.g a person unfortunate enough to graduate college single and unable to share a studio with a spouse.
As you point out: there's less room for error now, which aligns with more people speaking and writing about the topic.
Well the problem is that while $400/month may seem to you like a reasonable amount of cash to set aside, for many people it's not possible. It's quite funny you chose $400 actually - since there was a story recently about how a substantial amount of americans couldn't get their hands on $400 in a one-off emergency (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-23/almost-40...) let alone once a month for seven years.
It is reasonably small for a debt load for someone who has a degree, has been frugal, and is on an income based repayment plan. Most americans are not those things, and too few are frugal.
I recall my grandfather being proud of only having a $25 electricity bill... granted, it was about 20 years ago, so prices were a bit lower, but it was for a two story house.
Edit- also, that $400 was chosen for the payoff period, not a minimum payment. I believe the minimum on that would be closer to perhaps $200 a month.
I'm guessing you own your own home, locked in around 20 years ago. You do know what rents are now, right? If you have to carry family health insurance, that's another huge chunk of money.
Well, I just showed that apparently it is not a reasonably small debt load for many! Even if you halved the amount - as I said, if people struggle to get $400 for one-off emergency expense would they be able to afford $200 each month? Also we have more than doubled the time to pay off the principle, I hope everyone's got a nice low interest rate!
I get what you're trying to say - you see that people have the latest iPhones, buying expensive sneakers and sharing pics of their exotic holidays. It's easy to then look at the student loan crisis, connect the dots and think "Ah, it's all these people with their iPhones, sneakers and holidays! I however have lived frugally, more people should live like me". Everyone's circumstances are different, but I think I can guarantee that student loan debt is a problem not because graduates go on to eat avocado toast every day (or whatever people are upset about this week) but simply because to attend higher education the costs in the USA are astronomically high and generally require either incurring huge quantities of debt or the enormous good fortune of coming from wealth.
A lot of people got loans for degrees that don't pay. Or went a few years then dropped out.
I went to a college known for its recreation management program. Cool industry. Not a lot of good paying jobs. I know a few universities with amazing turf programs... Only so many golf courses and turf fields that need someone with that kind of knowledge and that pay well. Most jobs in turf are mowing and applying chemicals that only one person on staff needs a big degree to ensure proper maintenance.
I have read that, thank you for posting. Schools are good at selling the vision for sure. Sister did photography, and is amazing at it. Just doesn’t pay the bills. In that context, we do need future poets and artists, and I am sure their jobs will not cover their loans, major loss.
> we do need future poets and artists, and I am sure their jobs will not cover their loans, major loss
Do poets and artists need four+ year degrees, or degrees at all? Everything I've heard from friends who have gone to various programs have said that they actually really make it harder to be a good artist- whether from undermining your individual muse to cramping your style, or simply putting your mind in the box of what is "good" art.
For that matter, does society need full-time artists and poets who have not yet proven their abilities to the point where they can sustain themselves at a level they are comfortable living with? Maybe, maybe not. There are jobs related to art (say, visual design or writing copy) that can be done on full or even limited part time basis.
>There are jobs related to art (say, visual design or writing copy) that can be done on full or even limited part time basis.
This is the part I don't get. You're totally right. The skills taught in liberal arts programs are actually useful. I think university liberal arts departments could do a much better job of pointing students toward areas where they could use their skills. I flinch when someone says their poli sci or history degree is useless. Those are extremely useful for journalism and all subfields/areas where your vocabulary pays your rent. If done right, those degrees make you a better writer and generalist /specialist researcher than like, I don't know, at least 60% of the general population. I got an English degree just because I like reading books and writing. I wanted to be a journalist, which where I'm from is generally another year of specialised training after a three-year undergraduate degree. Then I went and lived overseas a couple of times and didn't want to be a journalist anymore. Used my skills for other things. It worked out fine. The liberal arts are more useful in the workforce than many people think.
I think I remember hearing at one point that a degree in forestry was a very sought out degree at University of Montana. Enough so that they alone graduated more students with forestry degrees than there are annual opennings in US Gov or private industry.
I dont have a reference for this, just anecdotal from when I grew up near University of Montana.
living in your own studio (as opposed to a double room in a shared appartment), owning a car and going eating out on occasion definitely sounds much more luxurious than how most college graduates that I know of live right now. I think if you were to graduate today this would be unfeasible considering housing costs.
Assuming ~90k of household income before taxes what he describes is definitely possible in the Boston area (which I know is not the most overpriced city but it's definitely on the leader board). You just can't be too good to live in an apartment where you see occasional mice and go out to eat at the Chinese buffet of questionable quality and drink mass produced domestic light beer. Basically you have to live below your means, not the way someone who's making STEM money is expected to live.
Two recent grads making a combined 90k pre-tax is 45th percentile for a household for Boston (per the calculator you linked). You have to actually prioritize it and consequently make all your little day to day decisions with an eye towards cost (which is going to be very hard for an upper middle class person who's never done that in their life to suddenly start doing) but you can definitely aggressively pay down debt or save money.
A new TV even being listed among the others dates yourself significantly. TVs have been cheap for a while now. In a quick search to even get above $500 you need ones greater than 60".
That sort of question is the new "How can poor people afford cellphones?" in terms of accidentally looking judgemental and out of touch by referencing past experiences without considering present reality.
1. Private colleges that spend a lot on marketing, cost a lot, and don't provide a worthwhile degree, nor transferrable credits. Think about all the unaccredited "tech" school advertisements all over the TV a few years ago.
2. Getting degrees that aren't marketable outside academia, such as Mideval Literature, etc. As an incoming college student, I had no idea what was a marketable career and what wasn't. Universities probably don't undermine their own departments either, so it can be a crap shoot.
3. Very expensive private liberal arts colleges, like the one Steve Jobs dropped out of.
I'm sure there are other pain points, but a kid that gets an in-state, public college degree in something he can earn a living doing isn't much of an issue. Typically, it's the vultures that pray on government programs intended to help the citizens.
> Is there any data on if folks with student loans are living above their means?
Literally every single friend of mine bought a new car when they graduated from college and got a job. Anecdotal, but I suspect it is more common than people realize.
It doesn't mean they were living above their means, but I think buying a new car at the start might be a financial misstep.
I graduated in 2003 and had to buy a car. I was driving an 88 Chevy Blazer that was starting to hit around $750 per month in maintenance. Final straw was when a cylinder was losing compression. This was already on an SUV that had its engine rebuilt and had more than 165K miles on it. It had a Kelly Blue Book value of about $100.
So, couple months out of college, I bought a modest Chevy Cavalier. Monthly payments were 1/3 of what I was paying in repairs, around $240/month. I could afford the car payments, I couldnt afford the monthly repairs.
I didn't buy my first fun car for about another 4 years. By then, had a well paying job, only debt was what lingered on the previous car loan. At the time, didnt have a great salary, probably around $100k, but I was getting generous bonuses. Every bonus I had went to paying off atudent loans before I did anything more than a couple hundred splurge. I think that I had my student loans paid off in the first 3 years at my first salaried, full time job.
I think the key, for me, is that when my income tripled from when I was an intern, I didn't change my lifestyle. I lived the same, with a slightly more expensive so I could be closer to work & public trans. Everything went to paying down debt.
I think this is the misstep for younger people that suddenly come into earning a lot more money: more money in, increase the life style and spend the increase in income. It's an easy trap to make. And no, I'm not ragging on Millenials. Its a problem that has happened to previous generations in the same situation. I think it might be a lack of personal financial maturity (you know, out on your own, gobsmacked with more money youve ever seen in your life), not a generational thing.
Edit: clarification about exspense on the old vehicle
Your frugality and dedication to eliminating debt is admirable. And it is true that many younger people (and older people too!) prefer spending over saving & reducing debt.
However... if you were making $100k 4 years after graduating college, you were doing better than probably 97% of people who started college at the same time as you (I don't say graduate, because many didn't). Maybe 99%.
I see that too. Most of the young engineers at my workplace never had a cheap car in their life. Their expectations are definitely much higher. I make quite a bit more and drive a Kia Rio. The young people almost all have cars that cost at least $10000 more.
I did that in 2007. I loved that car but it definitely was not a money wise decision. I also flew across the country five times that year because I was so homesick.
Went to school after my 1st child was born (back to school). Racked up debts to ITT tech (mistake) and it took me over 10 years to get to the income they promised in their sales spiel.
About 18 years later I climbed out of the 2x poverty hole and I'm still looking at renting for the rest of my life. I've paid little on my loans and my oldest daughter is going to college next year.
Alot of these student loans are to non-traditional students who were promised more then they were delivered.
Time to eliminate government funded student loans. Most of the kids going to college now shouldn't even be there in the first place.
I was doing volunteer work a few years back, speaking to some kids from the local community. One said he was going to a 4 year college, probably paid for by the government given the circumstances. Said he wanted to study "coaching". And our tax dollars are paying for this...
Sure they have, but studying for standardized tests (and tests in general) does not take significant financial resources. A diligent student only needs a few review books and the internet to study for standardized tests.
Is it harder for poor students? Of course. But is it prohibitively harder for a smart, poor student to do well in school and demonstrate their ability? Absolutely not.
This is the reactionary right-wing Twitter take, but for every coach, there's computer science, engineering & biology students suffering under massive, unforgivable debt.
Yes, student loans need to go, but not so that people don't go to college. That should be free for undergraduates in today's economy, where you need high level ed. for what used to be done by people who barely finished high-school 30 years back.
I think university education also makes more intelligent, socially and self aware members of society. Even if it doesn't directly lead to a career in a chosen field, it produces better people who hopefully make better employees.
Let's say that one thinks eventually a large percentage of for profit private colleges will have to close their doors. (think small ones that no one has ever heard of, not your Ivy's) What's the analog to The Big Short here?
There are asset-backed securities called SLABS (student loan ABS) that I guess you could make some kind of credit swap out of if that's what you're into. Probably super expensive to construct such an instrument since it like isn't a super liquid market.
That is one route, or I think the better route may be cds on revenue bonds for public or private schools. Should be cheaper cds, but just as damaged as the crisis rolls through
The value of secondary education has been diluted by the massive pool of "paper" floating around. There is quite the oversupply of "educated" (papered) individuals. The value of a secondary education has been diminished because of this oversupply. We've seen it in the tech scene: A good bit of companies equally value experience vs education (and some value experience more!) - and why not, the goal is to leverage labor for profit - in the case of tech; to create more utility.
Unfortunately, we've done a disservice to ourselves: Instead of teaching others how to think, we've taught them what to think. Most graduates coming out of the ivory tower of education lack the ability to bootstrap their own intellectual development. Historically, universities served a purpose: the higher-level of information and application could only be consumed through them (gatekeepers). We are in a new era of information. Information is abundant. We'd be better off as a society if we focused on the "how to think" than the "what to think".
The problem is compounded by the fact that students do not get to choose who their loan servicer is and thus a few servicers like Navient have a government approved monopoly on that business. Can look up many reports on their incompetence and misleading information that funnels students into repayment plans that maximize their own revenue.
Mine ended up getting shuffled around until it became Mohela. Once there it's stayed there.
Wikipedia: "The Higher Education Loan Authority of the State of Missouri, aka the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority or MOHELA, is one of the largest holders and servicers of student loans nationwide."
so in other words, when the government steps in and interferes with the loan market it just balloons costs and lacks the oversight it should have; because it was a quasi government agency which caused a big portion of the mess in the mortgage industry one with many connections to members of Congress
I won't lie, I have six figure student loan debt. It was all my own stupid making but what I think it's worrying is how fast people are willing to defend the loan system as is for education as employers continue to inflate requirements and certification processes when often such work can be learned on the job (programming IMO should be a trade school equivalent job and not something you go to university for unless it's for something related to pure science or an engineering discipline). So I expect the whole loan crisis to come to a head come the next recession. For me, I'm not so sure I'll be able to climb out of the hole I made for myself but I just wish politicians at minimum would prevent others from digging their own for the future.
> (programming IMO should be a trade school equivalent job and not something you go to university for unless it's for something related to pure science or an engineering discipline).
I learned way more in my degree about software principles and about theory than I could in years on the job. Computer Science degrees may not prepare people directly for software development in the workplace, but they do lead you to a greater understanding of what's around and underneath you that you're just not going to get commercially coding.
I'm not saying everyone has to do it, but I am going to say it helped me tremendously to be a better creator of software.
(--edit-- I'm also going to say that I was part of the last year of students that didn't have to pay for their degree's at all in England, I appreciate the value proposition is different when you have to take on debt to do the course.)
Highly doubt that will ever happen. Imagine trying to sell the idea to non-college educated, parents who have paid for college, or former-students who have paid off loans. It might get a few cheers at a primary rally but I highly doubt it would ever gain enough traction to get through the house and the senate
I think it will once the media declares it more of an emergency. It seems that the magnitude and exponential nature of the growth is forgotten and that soon enough it will reduce the demand on many products and services.
Let’s be very clear: Black Americans are poorer because of racist policies that kept them out of the huge post-WWII governmental benefit programs. Things like the GI bill and veteran home loans, and homeownership in general were white-only for many years, allowing that group to build generational wealth that continues to this day.
If you could discharge student loans via bankruptcy nobody would get a loan. No financial institution is going to hand out 5 figure loans to a teenager with no credit history, no job, and no marketable skills.
The reason is because politicians wanted to advertise that they “help” students while also telling taxpayers they can have lower taxes. There was no other reason the government needed to get involved in student loans.
So instead of paying for education directly and accounting for it as an expense, the politicians can claim they helped, taxpayers can feel like they helped and save money, and future generations get shafted.
Yet is not like.
When you default your mortgage, bank can get you rid of property. However what you have learned, you still have it in your head (at least in some way).
glad I realized that I needed to refinance my variable interest rate loans into a single fixed loan at ~2% APR after graduating.
I think I would have been screwed in this current climate.
IIRC, I received those loans at an advertised “teaser” rate of 1-2% APR, but since they were variable the percentage tended to increase over the years - 5-6% APR before refinancing.
Student loans program should continue for highly sought out program like medical, dentistry, computer science and others. But there are degree like physics, history and general education that doesn't have great employability. The university here will take all the money they can because at the end of the day this is just business for them. Students sometimes will take the easiest course because they can
Well, for one, it's a news organization so newspaper style is somewhat acceptable for them, and second, as for your particular example, while it does read a bit like a garden path sentence, it's a completely valid compound noun.
Because the US is a for-profit society, not one focused on improving the lives of citizens. Companies are making billions on health insurance, education, etc.
It won't change because they want to hold onto their profits.
School taxes on property pay for K-12, whether you have a child or not. I'm not ready to pay many multiples of that to send everyone to college for "free" for the rest of my life.
I think the student lending fiasco will be far worse than the sub-prime lending crisis. Although the amount of liquid assets and equity in the sub-prime lending debacle was an order of magnitude larger than the student loan crisis, the outcome for the student loan crisis isn't quite so clear yet. Allow me to paint a scenario...
There is a significant difference between the two lending fiascos, but mostly in how the fallout will look. Both the mortgage crisis and the student loan crisis started out as government programs meant to incentivize borrowing. They succeeded, mortgage debt rose 12%/yr in the years leading to the crisis, student loan deb at 11%/yr. Student loan debt now outpaces credit card and auto debt, and is 2nd only to mortgage debt. An increase in easy borrowing lead to higher prices in both cases, in the 10 years leading up to the housing recession, home prices went up 80%. In the last 10 years tuition prices have risen by also 80%. Not a problem if the value of the home or degree continues to rise, but labor income for college grads hasn't grown in 60 years. At all. In fact, if you adjust for inflation there has even been a slight decrease since 1960. Currently 30% of student lending ends up in default, but this number is also growing quickly and projections show this number at 40% by 2025. Sub-prime defaults were around 11% at its peak, so the rates of default for student lending are WAY worse than those of sub-prime mortgage lending, even though the total debt is significantly less. The big problem w/ sub-prime lending was the inability to pay them back (obviously), and same is happening with student loans - due to a lack of underwriting. You can't exactly repossess a degree, and even if you could the value on the 2nd hand market would be null. Filing bankruptcy would make mortgage lending debts go away, but that isn't the case with student loans, which will remain in perpetuity. True, overall mortgage debt was about 10x what student loan debt is at its peak, but there haven't been large derivatives markets set up to eat it like what happened with the mortgage collapse. Since the student lending default overage is going to be WAY more than what the US Government will be able to recoup from Social Security checks or income tax refunds, the person who will ultimately foot the bill for this lending crisis will not be insured banks; it will be you, the taxpayer, and ultimate the economy writ-large. Unless payroll wages somehow magically jump high enough to cover the stagnation we've experienced since the 1960's - unlikely without intervention.
It won't be easy for our economy to recover from this downturn either because the issues will be cultural and systemic. The course-corrective measures would be lenders locking out lower-income families from colleges, which prevents economic mobility and leads to a faster collapse of our middle class. Colleges will maybe drop tuition rates slightly but tuition is largely sticky, unlike housing prices. This may even lead to some colleges going out of business. Loans will likely start to be under-written appropriately, but this means degrees will be prioritized based on earnings potential, which means only a narrow field of study (medical, lawyers, tech, etc) will be eligible for lending. Schools may even price degrees differently, meaning schools will likely trend towards degree programs with the largest earnings potential, to the detriment of many other crucial fields of study. Ultimately college will become an institution to perpetuate a narrow focus of study, and only to those already in positions of wealth - which will further hasten the collapse of our middle class.
The student lending crisis is already having far-reaching economic slowdown implications, from decreased home ownership, higher rental rates, to lower purchasing of goods/services overall; with no clear indication of how to easily course-correct. Not to mention a worsening of cultural and systemic issues already in place. We may not be smart enough to even realize what hit us until it does.
I guess one could make the argument that our steadily rising healthcare costs are the reason take-home wages have been stagnant since the '60s. Companies are steadily paying more and more in healthcare costs and can't afford to raise wages much (if you believe the C-level propaganda). A big reason for the healthcare crisis is the industrialization of our food production chain. Amazing how scaling up mass-production of our food supply has all kinds of awful unintended cascading effects.
Sounds like real estate investment in high density and highly educated cities would be optimal here given your assessment. Any other opportunities you can see? Personally I think this may increase class mobility. A lot of middle class ____ Studies majors will be shifted down and creating opportunities/openings for those who didn't go to college and instead have trade skills and work experience
If universities had to worry about students defaulting, they would get rid of bullshit degrees that don't result in an actual job and the prices would come done due to free market forces.