ajax18 wrote:A clear unintended consequence of student loan guarantees is causing the price of a college education to go through the roof. Another consequence is too many kids borrowing too much for educations that don't make financial sense (e.g. the guys working for you for $12 an hour in temp jobs with $150,000 in debt for their USC degrees in filmmaking).
Wow, that sounds exactly right.
Personally, I'd be inclined to do away with student loan guarantees and replace them with the government identifying degrees that will be in high demand in the future (medicine, nursing, engineering, etc.), and then providing merit-based scholarships for people who go into those fields. If you don’t want to go into those fields because you have a passion for underwater basket weaving, feel free to go for it—just don’t expect the government to subsidize that choice.
Every now and then you say something that sounds exactly right. You're still a Marxist right? Don't you think this would be hard to swallow for the Democratic party. There are so many college professors whose livelihood depend on selling useless degrees and most of them are liberals, correct?
In general, I think Democrats would be warm to the idea of making college education freely available to a broad group of people. A few Democrats might want to throw a little bit of affirmative action into the merit-based scholarships, but otherwise they’d love the idea. In general they would be against getting rid of student loans, but if that program was replaced with enough scholarships so that the opportunity of college was still widely available, they might go along with it.
ajax18 wrote: I've ranted and raved about useless college degrees since I was in high school only to be dismissed with arguments like, "Money isn't everything. My husband won't mind paying my loans... and from BYUs student manual, "College is to educate people, not to prepare them for the workforce."
Money isn’t everything, but until the Revolution is complete and the world-wide system of true Communism is implemented, it is the way limited resources are allocated. If somebody wants to go to college and they have the money, that is their choice.
ajax18 wrote:Secondly, how is the government going to know what degrees will be in demand? It seems like the unseen hand of the free market would do better at answering and helping people accept difficult answers to this question. The only thing more difficult to do than figuring out what to do for a living is trying to tell someone else what career path they should pursue.
I’m not suggesting that the government tells specific individuals what careers they should choose. What I’m suggesting is that they say, “in order for us to have a great society, we need lots of people in the following professions: engineering, nursing, chemistry teachers, etc. We will provide a free education in those fields to the most-qualified people who apply. If you’d like to do something else, you are totally free to.”
The government isn’t going to know every degree that will be in demand in the future. But it can predict many of the needs of society. For example, you can look at our current demographics and predict how much health care we’re going to need in the future, and predict how many doctors and nurses will be needed to fulfill that demand.
Currently, we subsidize college pretty indiscriminately—a below-average student taking the misguided path of majoring in anthropology has the same access to student loans as the bright student majoring in civil engineering. I think it’s in society’s best interest to support the latter’s education pursuits, but not the former's.