moda0306 wrote:
The subsidized student loan market is a result of a compromise between liberals who think that education should be accessible to all, and conservatives who don't want to lay for it. Basically, now conservatives are pointing at them, crying socialism, and basically saying students should be on their own. Liberals point at them, crying lack of opportunity and middle-class burden, and think cheaper education access, not every student for themself, is the answer.
Basically, any bastardized abhoration of both private and public activity is going to result in problems. However, I don't think education being a huge burden to students is conducive to a growing middle class.
You're absolutely right! But I don't find it terribly helpful to make distinctions between republicans and democrats in situations like these. Conservatives prefer it to go through the private sector, while liberals prefer the government to do it itself, but the end result in this situation is the same no matter who gets their way: bad loans get made to uncreditworthy people, driving them into debt peonage and bidding up the price of the good or service they needed a loan to be able to afford in the first place.
Both parties deserve blame for the disastrous situation we find ourselves in where a 4-year college degree costs more than a house and unserious students with no prospects can borrow more than they ever have any realistic ability to repay. That's why I blamed "the government" rather than either political party.
If you want to expand educational opportunity (a goal widely shared, including by many conservatives), the absolute worst way to do it is to tilt the playing field so as to encourage uncreditworthy people to take out government-backed loans. It never ends well!
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