How Student Loans Create Demand For Useless Degrees

Submitted by Josh Grossman via The Mises Institute,

Last week, former Secretary of Education and US Senator Lamar Alexander wrote in the Wall Street Journal that a college degree is both affordable and an excellent investment. He repeated the usual talking point about how a college degree increases lifetime earnings by a million dollars, “on average.” That part about averages is perhaps the most important part, since all college degrees are certainly not created equal. In fact, once we start to look at the details, we find that a degree may not be the great deal many higher-education boosters seem to think it is.

In my home state of Minnesota, for example, the cost of obtaining a four-year degree at the University of Minnesota for a resident of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Manitoba, or Wisconsin is $100,720 (including room and board and miscellaneous fees). For private schools in Minnesota such as St. Olaf, however, the situation is even worse. A four-year degree at this institution will cost $210,920.

This cost compares to an average starting salary for 2014 college graduates of $48,707. However, like GDP numbers this number is misleading because it is an average of all individuals who obtained a four-year degree in any academic field. Regarding the average student loan debt of an individual who graduated in 2013, about 70 percent of these graduates left college with an average student loan debt of $28,400. This entails the average student starting to pay back these loans six months after graduation or upon leaving school without a degree. The reality of this situation is that assuming a student loan interest rate of 6.8 percent and a ten-year repayment period, the average student will be paying $326.83 every month for 120 months or a cumulative total re-payment of $39,219.28. Depending upon a student’s job, this amount can be a substantial monthly financial burden for the average graduate.

All Degrees Are Not of Equal Value

Unfortunately, there is no price incentive for students to choose degrees that are most likely to enable them to pay back loans quickly or easily. In other words, these federal student loans are subsidizing a lack of discrimination in students’ major choice. A person majoring in communications can access the same loans as a student majoring in engineering. Both of these students would also pay the same interest rate, which would not occur in a free market.

In an unhampered market, majors that have a higher probability of default should be required to pay a higher interest rate on money borrowed than majors with a lower probability of default. In summary, it is not just the federal government’s subsidization of student loans that is increasing the cost of college, but the fact that demand for low-paying and high-default majors is increasing, because loans for these majors are supplied at the same price as a major providing high salaries to its possessor with a low probability of default.

And which programs are the most likely to pay off for the student? The top five highest paying bachelor’s degrees include: petroleum engineering, actuarial mathematics, nuclear engineering, chemical engineering and electronics and communications engineering, while the top five lowest paying bachelor’s degrees are: animal science, social work, child development and psychology, theological and ministerial studies, and human development, family studies, and related services. Petroleum engineering has an average starting salary of $93,500 while animal science has an average starting salary of $32,700. This breaks down for a monthly salary for the petroleum engineer of $7,761.67 versus a person working in animal science with a monthly salary of $2,725. Based on the average monthly payment mentioned above, this would equate to a burden of 4.2 percent of monthly income (petroleum engineer) versus a burden of 12 percent of monthly income (animal science). This debt burden is exacerbated by the fact that it is now nearly impossible to have student loan debts wiped away even if one declares bankruptcy.

Ignoring Careers That Don’t Require a Degree

Meanwhile, there are few government loan programs geared toward funding an education in the trades. And yet, for many prospective college students, the trades might be a much more lucrative option. Using the example of plumbing, the average plumber earns $53,820 per year with the employer paying the apprentice a wage and training.

Acknowledging the fact that this average salary is for master plumbers, it still equates to a $20,000 salary difference between it and someone with a four-year degree in animal science while having no student loans as a bonus. Outside of earning a four-year degree in science, technology, engineering, math or, accounting with an average starting salary of $53,300, nursing with an average starting salary of $53,624, or as a family practice doctor on the lower end of physician pay of $161,000, society might be better served if parents and educators would stop using the canard that a four-year degree is always worth the cost outside of a few majors mentioned above. Encouraging students to consider the trades and parents to give their children the money they would spend on a four-year college degree to put a down payment on a house might be a better use of finite economic resources. The alternative of forcing the proverbial square peg into a round hole will condemn another generation to student debt slavery forcing them to put off buying a home or getting married.

Loans Drive Overall Demand

The root of the problem is intervention by the federal government in providing student loans. Since 1965 when President Johnson signed the Higher Education Act tuition, room, and board has increased from $1,105 per year to $18,943 in 2014–2015. This is an increase of 1,714 percent in 50 years. In addition, the Higher Education Act of 1965 created loans which are made by private institutions yet guaranteed by the federal government and capped at 6.8 percent. In case of default on the loans, the federal government — that is, the taxpayers — pick up the tab in order for these lenders to recover 95 cents on every dollar lent. Loaning these funds at below market interest rates and with the federal government backing up these risky loans has led to massive malinvestment as the percentage of high-school graduates enrolled in some form of higher education has increased from 10 percent before World War II to 70 percent by the 1990s. Getting a four-year degree in nearly any academic field seemed to be the way in which to enter or remain in the middle class.

But just as with the housing bubble, keeping interest below market levels while increasing the money supply in terms of loans — while having the taxpayer on the hook for a majority of these same loans — leads to an avalanche of defaults and is a recipe for disaster.


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9 Comments
alwayspissedaboutsomething
alwayspissedaboutsomething
July 19, 2015 9:53 am

The problem with the trades are twofold. First it beats the shit out of your body. Any trade, from driving a dumptruck to a mechanic or carpenter. Second, you gotta be a worker. Which means motivated to actually work hard, and smart enough to do the job at hand. Notice any millenials like that? Damn few in my experience. We are starving for basic tradesmen up here. 25 per hour to start for experienced anything in building trades and mechanics of all stripes. I am starting a guy tomorrow I met friday on ahandshake and a tshirt (from a previous employer means he at least has done the job before) for 30/hr carpenter with electrical helper experience. I got paid 3.35 per hour to do this job in 1984 when I first did it. The work and the money is there, but the people who are capable are few and far between.

Wip
Wip
July 19, 2015 10:42 am

@alwayspissedaboutsomething,

Do you train? Maybe that is why you were paid 3.35/hr in 84′? You were being trained?

Irish
Irish
July 19, 2015 12:38 pm

alwayspissedaboutsomething,

You forgot to mention that most public schools steer students towards college rather than the trades. As for work ethic – you don’t learn that in school. If your parents and/or the primary adults in your life don’t teach that to you early on, you’re not likely to develop the habit later in life.

alwayspissedaboutsomething
alwayspissedaboutsomething
July 19, 2015 3:37 pm

And thats the issue irish, work ethic. As for training, I was at 3.35, and we do at 15-18 an hour and pay for time in classes with a six month commitment. I got one guy, and he lasted a week. The others lasted longer, but not one has finished the damn 7 and a half month program. Better to train onsight mission specific. But guys under thirty with no kids dont last. And anyone with 6 months experience wants to start their own gig, with no clue as to what is even code. I dont know where new employables will even come from, and I need to do this for another 15 years minimum. Everybody I know across four states are running in to the same exact issue. At least everyone who was supposed to showed up today. And kids dont get that sometimes you need to work when the client wants you there. 3 guy 5 hourday is good sunday money, and double time cash at that, and a beer upon completion.

TPC
TPC
July 19, 2015 4:11 pm

@alwayspissedaboutsomething,

Pretty much all STEM jobs I’ve seen or my friends have received in the last three years have entailed a high degree of physical labor.

Wages are deflating, hours are increasing, and the variety of work you are expected to do is sky rocketing.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
July 19, 2015 8:48 pm

Son in law who is a pipe fitter turned contractor verifies that bodies take a hell of a beating. He also tells me that trades are having a tough time filling and keeping apprenticeships. Kids want the money and the jobs but not the work. Alwayspissed has it right.

Razzle
Razzle
July 19, 2015 9:00 pm

When the kid is over-protected from minor injury due to be prevented from taking physical risks and the lessons learned from failures AND success when taking those risks… the adult can’t handle the discomforts of trade jobs.

It’s not really the adult’s *fault*… but they are defective in terms of being a fully functional human being.

Irish
Irish
July 20, 2015 9:09 am

Razzle,

The tendency in our society for raising kids nowadays is to accentuate the positive, tell everyone how great they did, and give everyone a participation ribbon or a medal. It’s all about positive reinforcement and focusing on good feelings. That’s borderline child abuse when you think about it. If we only teach kids how to handle life with their feelings, we do them a giant disservice. They’re going to get punched in the face by life and not know how to handle it. It would be much better to teach them how to think rationally and the importance of possessing a proper work ethic. Each parent has to recognize this and take the difficult steps of ensuring this is imparted to their own children. I know of no quick-win or shortcut to instill these virtues in all of society.

Razzle
Razzle
July 20, 2015 11:42 am

I no longer qualify it as borderline… it’s outright child abuse and will be looked back upon as barbaric. It delays and then massively amplifies the trauma from the pain to a later time where recovering becomes far more difficult if not outright impossible.