“Is the College Debt Bubble Ready to Explode?,” asks Laura Rowley at Yahoo Finance. College tuition has skyrocketed much more than housing did during the housing bubble, in percentage terms. 100 colleges charge $50,000 or more a year, compared to just 5 in 2008-09. College tuition has surged along with federal financial-aid spending, which indirectly rewards colleges for increasing tuition. College financial-aid policies punish thrifty families, so that “parents who scrimp and save to come up with the tuition are in effect subsidizing the others."
“University administrators are the equivalent of subprime mortgage brokers,” notes Facebook investor Peter Thiel, “selling you a story that you should go into debt massively, that it’s not a consumption decision, it’s an investment decision. Actually, no, it’s a bad consumption decision. Most colleges are four-year parties,” he says, an assessment shared by prominent law professor Glenn Reynolds.
My wife is French. She spent twice as much time in class at her second-tier French university as I did in my flagship American university (the University of Virginia), and more time studying, too (even though I was studious by American standards, and as a result, later went on to attend Harvard Law School). France spends less per student on higher education than we do, to produce a more literate and knowledgeable citizenry.
Vast amounts of money are spent by American colleges on useless administrators and politically-correct indoctrination. For many people, college no longer pays off as an investment.
Much of college “education” is a waste of time. I learned more practical law in six weeks of studying for the bar exam and a couple summers of working for law firms than I did in three years of law school. I spent much of my time at Harvard Law School watching “Married With Children” or arguing with classmates about politics, rather than studying (much of what I did study was useless). Even students who were high on drugs had no difficulty graduating.
(Higher education is no guarantee of even basic literacy. When I worked at the Department of Education handling administrative appeals, I was dismayed by the poor writing skills of the graduate students who lodged complaints against their universities).
I used to work for a polling firm, and found that people with a couple years of college were frequently factually dumber about the world around them, and more politically-correct, than people who had not attended college at all, in their responses to public-opinion surveys. An electrician with no college degree is far more likely to know who his Congressman is and to understand the economy than some liberal-arts college dropout.
When law schools claim almost all of their graduates find jobs, what they don’t tell you is that they include low-paying, part-time and temporary jobs in non-legal fields in making that claim. Sending excessive numbers of people to college results in even unskilled jobs being performed by people with college degrees.











Comments
It figures. Yet the White House stupidly wants to send everyone, no matter how unscholarly, to community college or college, so that American can have more cab drivers with college degrees.
Some degrees, like engineering, probably still pay for themselves.
But many liberal-arts degrees don't, unless jobs are artificially created for them by expanding government and college bureaucracies.
What was this rant about? College costs, French students, jobs for law school grads were all mentioned then dropped. This is a great example of the author doing what he complains of. Focus man and tell us what the point is. I felt like I read half of a middle shcooler's text conversation.
bet the same people that donate to her site would walk past a bum on the street and tell him to get a job without so much as tossing a dime his way. But, she is a college degreed beggar ... so she is worthy. People shouldn't take out huge loans for expensive schools if they aren't going into a career where they can make enough money to be able to afford to pay it back. She could have chosen a community college and gotten some training that would actually make her marketable. Or she could have just skipped school and got a job at McDonalds. Either way she wouldn't have to resort to begging ...
http://www.meratvforum.com
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