Alistair
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- May 25, 2018
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I'm with you on this. I have some student debt from my first degree (the interest is low so I'm in no rush to repay it), but college is supposed to be an investment in yourself. If you choose wisely and it pays off, you'll repay the debt anyway. If you don't, you wont.The Department of Education recently canceled $3.9 billion in student debt for people who were defrauded by ITT Technical Institute. Biden is poised to extend the freeze on debt repayments once again. The closely held progressive belief is that all college loans should be forgiven. Which means the taxpayers, who got nothing in return, get the honor of paying the student‘s bill.
What is it about student debt that makes it so special that the government wants to waive its magic wand and make it disappear? I think debt forgiveness is a bad idea regardless, but if we do it, why not absolve all debt? What about all the people who’ve borrowed money to start a business? Or, pay medical bills? Or…..you get the picture. Again, why student loans?
The only reason I can think of is that people who attend college are more likely to vote Democrat. The ultimate vote buying move. It’s the Dems version of trickle down economics.
For context….I went to college twice. My parents paid for my undergraduate degree. I paid for my masters, by working full time and going to night school. So I am not arguing against higher Ed. I just think people should pay for the stuff they purchase.
But either way, it's a choice freely made by supposedly intelligent adults. If you make the wrong choice, you own that. Writing off the debt just encourages people to do stupid degrees with a poor ROI and further devalues the degree itself. I can't endorse that.
Really, the government, if they want to make education accessible, should be subsidizing degrees in fields that the country needs (medicine, STEM, IT, business and law perhaps). These degrees provide value. But then, people doing them have a very high chance of paying off their student loan anyway, so long as they're willing to work a bit. All they're doing right now is actively encouraging people to do degrees that don't deliver value, because, hey, it's free so why not spend 3 or 4 years dossing around doing a degree in rap history and partying?