The Immorality of Student Loan Forgiveness and Free College

Guest Post by Nick Gillespie

elizabethwarren4-29

So now college should be free in the same way K–12 education is. That’s what most (though not all) of the Democratic presidential candidates are saying, with Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren offering the most-detailed plan to make tuition at public universities free, forgiving “95 percent” of existing student debt, and increasing the amount of money for Pell grants and historically black colleges and universities. Ironically, the push for “free” college is coming at a time when a historically high percentage—about 70 percent—of recent high-school graduates are already enrolling in college. College has somehow become so unaffordable and remote that more and more people are attending.

“This is the kind of big, structural change we need to make sure our kids have opportunity in this country,” says Warren in a video she posted at Twitter. But just like Bernie Sanders’s routine and misleading invocation of “people with $300,000 in student debt,” Warren’s plan doesn’t just misrepresent the impact of student loans on the individual level and the historically high availability of access to higher education; it’s one more step toward an America where the people who benefit from something get somebody else to pay for it. Above and beyond any financial considerations, that’s a bad attitude to inculcate.

Warren would pay for her plan with an “Ultra-Millionaire Tax” on the 75,000 richest households in America, which she says would raise $2.75 trillion over a decade. As Peter Suderman has noted, “European countries that have imposed wealth taxes have largely given up on them; of the dozen OECD nations that had wealth taxes in 1990, just four still have the tax on the books.” Warren also keeps promising to spend her new revenue on all sorts of things, to a degree that there isn’t enough money to cover her growing list of giveaways.

Warren’s plan is of a piece with progressive Democrats pushing for more and more goods and services to be provided by the government regardless of citizens’ ability to cover their own costs. From a financial perspective, this sort of reflex is flatly unsustainable in a country that has already run up a $22 trillion tab and whose rising debt service will cost more than Medicaid next year and more than military spending in 2023. But there’s also a moral argument to be made here: Why shouldn’t we expect people who can pay for their own education, health care, and retirement to do so? And why shouldn’t we expect people who benefit from something to fund all or most of their activity?

When it comes to college, high-school grads are enrolling at historically high rates, a sign that they have access to higher education. Using three-year moving averages (which smooth out minor fluctuations) the National Center for Education Services (NCES) reports that a record-high level 69.5 percent of “recent high-school completers” are enrolled in college. In 1975, the first year for which data is presented, the figure was 49.1 percent. In 1980, it was 50.8 percent. Warren can rhapsodize about how much cheaper college tuition used to be, but the reality is that far higher percentages of people are attending college than ever before. In fact, according to NCES, a record high level of students from low-income households are attending college right out of a high school. The three-year moving average for low-income students in 2016, the latest year for which data is presented, was an unprecedented 67.1 percent—more than double the figure in 1980.

And despite claims that “we’re crushing an entire generation with student-loan debt,” the typical undergrad borrower is doing fine. About 70 percent of the Class of 2018 graduated with some debt, and their median monthly payment is $222. The overall amount of student debt is gigantic—about $1.5 trillion—but when you break it down to what the typical borrower is actually on the hook for, the picture changes dramatically.

If college students have skin in their own game, they’ll think more seriously about going to college in the first place and be more motivated to be serious and to finish. Also, one reason why tuition hikes have outpaced the general rate of inflation is that government-guaranteed student loans have helped to goose the costs. Meanwhile, the returns to a college degree remain immense even if they have flattened a bit in recent years. In a 2016 paper for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Robert G. Valletta found that in 1980, the average worker with a high school degree made $16.33 per hour while the average worker with a college degree made $22.85. In 2015, the high school grad made $17.98 per hour while the college grad averaged $30.93. (All those figures are in 2015 dollars.) While studies of the effect of college on take-home pay vary, all show large gains and lower unemployment rates. If you’re going to make as much as a million extra dollars over your working lifetime by getting a B.A., you should be the one footing the bill.

There’s nothing wrong with asking people who benefit from something to shoulder all or part of the costs. Our national finances are falling apart largely because we keep insisting that all benefits be universal and that nobody pay their own way when it comes to big-ticket items such as health care, education, and retirement. One result in those areas are markets that don’t function as efficiently as they would otherwise. Another is a pervasive belief that we can always pass the costs of our choices onto other people. Our government is trying to be all things to all people It would be better to let it focus on helping people who can’t help themselves, and let the rest of us get on our with our own lives.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
As an Amazon Associate I Earn from Qualifying Purchases
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
12 Comments
Pequiste
Pequiste
April 29, 2019 3:39 pm

Free college and everything? Of course not Silly Lizzie! Even at Dizney’s fantasy theme parks it costs a stiff $189 bucks for a premium ticket. Perhaps one learns more at Mickey Rats than at university these days?

There is an old saw that says “You get what you pay for.” and a free college education might just be all that.

However if someone had the actual cojones to say we can pay for much of our government including “education”by taxing robots as we currently tax humans for income. Those same robots that have taken millions of jobs from working people in the U.S.A. alone as it happens. Robots that require no medical care, vacations, old-age pensions, union representation, maternity leave or sick days; just acquisition costs, maintenance and repairs.

Any practitioners of the Dismal Science’s macro-economic voodoo on board? One might be able to run rough numbers on the proposal.

BB
BB
  Pequiste
April 29, 2019 4:02 pm

Why 95% ? Why not all student loan debt forgiven ? Did I miss something?

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
  Pequiste
April 29, 2019 4:02 pm

Define “robot”. If I use an accounting app to keep track of expenses then do I have a “robot” that needs to be taxed? Text to type applications have replaced personal assistants, should those apps be taxed as well? After all, they are doing jobs that people used to do.

not myself
not myself
  Pequiste
April 29, 2019 6:36 pm

The democrats have gone full-blown communist. They are doing Stalin’s work

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
April 29, 2019 6:32 pm

If we are going to bailout the worst economic offenders (banks)…

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
April 29, 2019 7:21 pm

Student loans are for all intents and purposes not dischargeable in BK. Universities know this and, due to the supply of over-eager, non-performant students enrolling, jack up tuition rates. Effects?

Less tradesmen when we need them. Dunderheads indebted up to their asses for underwater basket-weaving degrees — if they graduate. Government guarantees not worth the paper they are no longer printed on. And on and on.

Both sides must partially be forgiven and partially be punished. This means that no politician, no lawyer, and no banker will ever come up with a productive, workable solution. We are living on borrowed time.

Tomthall
Tomthall
  Articles of Confederation
April 29, 2019 10:53 pm

Love it

niebo
niebo
April 29, 2019 8:53 pm

If college education is “free in the same way K–12 education is”, it will be just as useless.

Tomthall
Tomthall
  niebo
April 29, 2019 10:53 pm

Couldn’t of said it better

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 29, 2019 10:40 pm

General Aladeen: You seem educated.
Zoey: Yes, I went to Amherst.
General Aladeen: I love it when women go to school. It’s like seeing a monkey on roller skates. It means nothing to them, but it’s so adorable for us.

Tomthall
Tomthall
  Anonymous
April 29, 2019 10:53 pm

Funny!!!

AB
AB
April 30, 2019 10:30 am

“let the rest of us get on our with our own lives.” – that’s rather naive.

If I paid for my health care what my insurance company “allows”, I could pay for it out of my own pocket. The socialist camel is already in the tent. Debt reset, including the national debt may be the way forward. It’s referred to as a debt jubilee, and it’s biblical.

If government didn’t steal 50% of what an individual earns, there would be less need for social programs. Of course, that means the government would have to start living within it’s means, which isn’t going to happen.

There’s an Article 5 Constitutional Convention being considered that could pass a Balanced Budget amendment.

There would be an immediately declared civil war if that same convention attempted to strike the second amendment and impose martial law. The freedom we enjoy as Americans shines as a beacon to the world, and it’s worth fighting for, the nanny state be damned.