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Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Economics of College: Part II
by Thomas Sowell
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Those who argue that the taxpayers should be forced to subsidize people who go to colleges and universities seldom bother to think beyond the notion that education is a Good Thing.

Some education is not only a good thing but a great thing. But, like most good things, there are limits to how much of it is good -- and how good compared to other uses of the resources required.

In other words, education is not a Good Thing categorically in unlimited amounts, for people of all levels of ability, interest and willingness to work.

Nor is there any obvious way to set an arbitrary limit. These are questions that no given individual can answer for a whole society.

The most we can do is confront individuals with the costs that their choices are imposing on others who want the same resources for other purposes, and are willing to pay for those resources.

Those who cannot bring themselves to face the tough choices that reality presents often seek escape to some kind of fairy godmother -- the government or, more realistically, the taxpayers.

When the idea of conscripting taxpayers to play the role of fairy godmother for some arbitrarily selected favorites of the intelligentsia, "the poor" are often used as human shields behind which to advance toward their goal.

What will happen to the poor if there are no government subsidies for college?

If this argument is meant seriously, rather than being simply a political talking point, then there can always be some means test used to decide who qualifies as poor and then subsidize just those people -- rather than the vastly larger number of other claimants for government largesse who advance toward the national treasury, using the poor as human shields.

Another option would be to allow students to sign enforceable contracts by which lenders would pay their college or university expenses in exchange for a given percentage of their future earnings.

That way, students would be issuing stocks to raise capital, the way corporations do, instead of being limited to borrowing money to be paid back in fixed amounts -- the latter being equivalent to issuing corporate bonds. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Jack,
Your comments of
Thursday, April, 24, 2008 5:25 PM
to
goyle

are prima fascie evidence you don't have a clue how the free market and contract system works.

Your list is a series of non-sequiturs. I can understand how you would vehemently oppose such a system however. You would be off the public teat.


Say No to Loans
While writing my blog today, I turned to the columnists for inspiration and found this piece.

I come from a middle-class background, yet my family paid for my college. We were able to do this because we did without a lot of things and because I went to a college that was truly working to keep its costs down. (Grove City College)

There is a big difference in outlook between a graduate who is debt free and one who is saddled in loan debt. I was free to follow my peculiar dream of teaching in North Dakota. The low starting pay in that state would have made it impossible to pay off much student loan debt. Had I been in debt, I would have found a job in a state that paid quite a bit more.

Keeping costs down and avoiding loans make it possible for the graduate to follow his dreams rather than the dictates of his wallet. 10 years later, I'm still living my North Dakota dream and loving it.
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