Trump Holds All the Cards in Iran
CNN's Scott Jennings Responds to the Loser Progressives Pushing for His Firing
This Tennessee Republican Had the Best Reaction to the New Congressional Map...and It...
John Fetterman Isn't Switching Parties for One Simple Reason
Nice Work: Texas Father Caught Defending His Family as an Illegal Tried to...
The Press Now Sees Problems With Kash Patel Gifting Bourbon; Voting In a...
What 'Rights' Do They Want That They Don’t Already Have?
Why Won't Barack Obama Go Away?
-2 + -2 = +4?
The New York Times Hunts for an Anonymous White Male Dissent
Trump Is Making American Rail Great Again. A Mega-Merger Could Undo It.
Trump's Churchillian Foreign Policy
A Tale of Two Billionaires
Illegal Alien Pleads Guilty to Laundering Cash Stolen from Elderly Americans in Grandparen...
Federal Court Sentences Michigan Man to 20 Years for ISIS Support, Bomb Possession
Tipsheet

Obama's Legacy of Student Debt

Obama's Legacy of Student Debt

The Wall Street Journal published the chart above today based off a recent Federal Reserve Bank of New York report on trends in U.S. household debt.

As you can see from the chart, while mortgage, auto, and credit card debt still has not reached pre-financial crisis levels, student debt has exploded and now totals more than $1 trillion.

Advertisement

Why does this matter to you?

For starters, as the Federal Reserve notes in a separate blog post, Americans with high levels of student debt are less likely to buy new cars or homes. This means fewer jobs in the auto and housing sectors of the economy, and the study suggests that student debt is probably causing lower levels of spending in other economic sectors as well.

And on a micro level, more student debt means fewer options for graduates. If you have more debt, you are more likely to take a job with a steady employer than work at a new firm or start your own company.

Less spending on a macro level, and less risk taking on a micro level, means less economic growth overall. In other words, student debt is a major drag on the economy.

How is this President Obama's fault?

For starters, Obama has presided over the weakest economic recovery since the Great Depression. His Keynesian deficit spending failed to stimulate the economy, and instead of making it easier for businesses to hire people by lowering the cost of employment, he made hiring more expensive through a slew of new federal mandates and regulations, including Obamacare's employer mandate.

Advertisement

Since employers are not hiring people, more high school and college graduates are choosing to go back to school instead of work. And they are borrowing a ton of money to do so.

This is why the unemployment rate keeps falling despite the fact that the number of Americans with jobs still has not recovered from pre-recession levels. Younger Americans are borrowing money to exit the job market and go back to school.

Looking ahead, if our nation's colleges and graduate schools are teaching valuable and marketable skills, then maybe this generation of students will eventually recover.

But if young Americans are just sitting on the economic sidelines, and gathering a mountain of student debt in the process, then the Obama presidency will be a slow motion disaster for decades to come.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement