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Democratic Primaries
Showing Original Post only (View all)WaPo Editorial Board : Elizabeth Warren has the wrong answer to America's student debt problem [View all]
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/elizabeth-warren-has-the-wrong-answer-to-americas-student-debt-problem/2019/04/23/a67f78e8-65e1-11e9-a1b6-b29b90efa879_story.htmlTRAILING IN the polls, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is running ahead of the Democratic presidential pack in terms of policy specifics. We hope other candidates will emulate her willingness to lay out an agenda. Alas, her latest big idea to eliminate vast quantities of student debt and make public universities tuition-free is not a sound idea.
The nations households owe almost $1.5 trillion in student loans, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. This represents a burden on many families, which, under Ms. Warrens plan, would disappear completely for 75 percent of them, and at least partially for 95 percent. Thats because she would forgive debts up to $50,000 just over twice the average federal student loan balance, $23,000. And she would do so for borrowers with a household income under $100,000 some 80 percent of the population. Even borrowers earning up to $250,000 would be eligible for some relief, which would total $640 billion overall. Free college would add $600 billion or so more, for a total price tag over 10 years of $1.25 trillion.
No one can accuse Ms. Warren of thinking small. What she really needs is a better sense of proportion. Her premise seems to be that student debt is all burden and no benefit, but this is not true: It represents an investment in skill acquisition that pays substantial long-term benefits. President Barack Obamas Council of Economic Advisers estimated this lifetime earnings premium at about $1 million over a worker with only a high school education. Its not unfair to expect people to pay back their loans out of that income. What might be unfair is debt relief to the exclusion of other priorities with wider benefits, including to people who did not go to college at all. Ms. Warren proposes a wealth tax to cover the cost, the proceeds of which would then not be available for alternative, possibly more progressive uses. In any case, default rates are actually falling slightly, according to the latest Education Department figures; 84.7 percent of borrowers were current on their obligations as of the end of 2017, according to the New York Fed.
As for tuition-free college, why should children of families in the upper reaches of the income distribution scale receive an income-enhancing state-university education for nothing, when their parents are perfectly capable of helping defray the cost?
Other Democrats have, quite properly, raised feasibility concerns about Ms. Warrens plan. I have to be straight with you and tell you the truth, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) told a group of New Hampshire students recently, in explaining why she wouldnt match Ms. Warrens offer. For us, though, policy priority is the essential concern. Student-loan defaults are concentrated among students who attended for-profit institutions, or who accumulated low loan balances but then dropped out and were stuck paying the money back out of lower-than-anticipated earnings. Such issues are hardest for students and families of color, as Ms. Warren correctly emphasized. This calls for a targeted approach that relieves the worst financial stress of those least able to handle it, not a sweeping bailout for the middle class and above.

I do have to laugh at this (such a RW trope)
why should children of families in the upper reaches of the income distribution scale receive an income-enhancing state-university education for nothing
obviously it would not be 'for nothing' as they would pay a lot more in taxes
shoddy, slanted framing, I sorta expected more from WaPo, but not shocked they fell back to misleading canards
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
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WaPo Editorial Board : Elizabeth Warren has the wrong answer to America's student debt problem [View all]
Celerity
Apr 2019
OP
the college thing is the one huge disagreement I have with Pete, BUT I need to see more of what he's
Celerity
Apr 2019
#3
Free community college is actually much better then giving the rich a 2 trillion dollar tax break
yaesu
Apr 2019
#5
Gee, why should children of families in the upper reaches of the income distribution scale ...
PeeJ52
Apr 2019
#2
yep, the more I see the elite crying about this the more i'm focusing on our true progressive
yaesu
Apr 2019
#6
If a wealthy person wants to send their kid to a state college, I think that's fantastic.
Politicub
Apr 2019
#10