Posted on 10/10/2006 6:28:30 AM PDT by SteelersFan1
Education Aid Mythology by: Malcolm A. Kline, October 04, 2006
The idea that the only thing standing between at-risk youth and a college education is a mere several thousand dollars apiece is a nostrum repeated ad nauseum by politicians and professors alike. As notions go, it may have considerably less weight to it than the average cosmetic counter notion.
The facts are not in dispute, Robert L. Borosage writes on tompaine.com. Faced with rising costs and tight budgets, states across the country are cutting back on support for public universities and colleges.
Colleges pass the costs onto studentstuitions are up an average of 40 percent since George W. Bush took office in 2000. Borosage heads the Campaign for Americas Future. He is an adjunct professor at American Universitys Washington School of Law.
College aid hasnt kept up, Borosage insists. The president has broken his campaign pledge to increase the size of Pell Grants, the basic federal scholarship program.
More and more students are forced to go into debt to pay for college. Borosage has served as an advisor to a number of political candidates over the years, including Jesse Jackson. Indeed, his basic themes are echoed in Democratic talking points that, in turn, are largely left unanswered by Republicans.
Graduates of four-year schools this year will be burdened by an average of $23,600 in student loans and $2,000 in credit card debt, Borosage writes. Yet, the conservative majority in Congress voted to cut $12 billion out of the student loan program this year, even as Congress hiked interest rates on college loans to students and parents.
Costs are going up, even as hundreds of thousands of students are forced to forego college or drop out because they cannot afford the education that they need and have earned. As it turns out, many of these assertions were belied by information supplied by researchers, some even from academia, no less, who appeared recently in a symposium at the American Enterprise Institute.
For one thing, Demand for Student Loans is not limited by income group, Harvards Bridget Terry Long pointed out. Twenty-nine to thirty-one percent of high income students take out loans to go to college. An Associate Professor of Education and Economics at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, Long asked two intriguing questions about students, particularly wealthy ones, who take out loans:
Were they borrowing because they need it or because they dont want to deplete other sources of cash? and
Were people taking out loans for pizza and vacations or families and children?
The answer to such questions, Long notes, is not immediately apparent from available data.
Also at AEI, consultant Christopher Mazzeo laid out some interesting data from the Institute for Higher Education Policy:
52% of students max out on Stafford student loans.
47% of students either dont max out or do not take out the loans.
37% of private borrowers work.
63% dont.
Several of the speakers at the event noted that only one-third of students are working their way through college in addition to borrowing, a puzzle when the stated reason for the loan is need. In days of old, students borrowed and worked their way through college.
In fact, Mazzeo, who has worked as a professor at Baruch College, noted that A surprisingly large number of low-income students do not max out on Stafford loans. At the other end of the transaction is a multi-billion dollar industry, mostly fueled by tax dollars.
As we noted in previous dispatches, dissident economist Richard Vedder drew mostly grunts and groans when he tried to include references to the $80 billion student loan industry in the final report of the federal commission on higher education that he serves on.
Ironically, at the AEI event, Joseph Keeney, who works in that industry, virtually confirmed Dr. Vedders figures. There are $63 billion worth of federal loans extended annually and $13 billion in private lending, Keeney calculates.
As Keeney, of the firm School Choice Investments, notes, both feds and private banks make a 10-20 percent premium on top of that amount. Moreover, there is some level of recovery even on loans that are completely lost, Keeney says, and Any cash from the student can be moved into securities.
Meanwhile, Dickinson College professor Andrew Rudalevige offers an analysis of the industry that you dont hear often and that Borosage and his ilk should consider: Student loan rates are set by law and not by the market and thats a problem.
I have employed a number of ex-cons in my manufacturing business. Most of them read and write at an elementary school level, if that. Sending them to college is a joke. Trade school, maybe. But, the biggest problem is attitude and work-ethic. If they cannot work hard, tolerate a bit of stress, and avoid violent behavior then they cannot be employed let alone go to college.
1. They don't talk about how much college cost have risen and what the colleges are doing to keep costs down.
2. Not everyone needs a college education. Its a shame we lost so many vocational programs in high schools.
"They don't talk about how much college cost have risen and what the colleges are doing to keep costs down. "
They aren't trying very hard to keep costs down, that's why.
Colleges have been setting up departments for all sorts of ridiculously specialized study, which costs a small fortune.
"1. They don't talk about how much college cost have risen and what the colleges are doing to keep costs down. "
Answer: Nothing.
"2. Not everyone needs a college education. Its a shame we lost so many vocational programs in high schools."
True enough. Plumbers, Electricians, HVAC techs make far more than many college graduates will ever make. At some point, the ROI for college makes no sense, especially for certain fields of study.
Any limit in loan availability will directly affect the number of sabbaticals available to tenured professors, and is therefore the fault of greedy republicans.
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