Editor’s
Note: I’ve been saying this
for years... now that someone else has said it, maybe we will listen?
Townhall...
Will
College Bubble Burst From Public
Subsidies?
By Michael Barone
7/21/2011
When
governments want to encourage what
they believe is beneficial behavior, they subsidize it. Sounds like
good public
policy.
But
there can be problems. Behavior
that is beneficial for most people may not be so for everybody. And
government
subsidies can go too far.
Subsidies
create incentives for what
economists call rent-seeking behavior. Providers of supposedly
beneficial goods
or services try to sop up as much of the subsidy money as they can by
raising
prices. After all, their customers are paying with money supplied by
the government.
Bubble
money, as it turns out. And
sooner or later, bubbles burst.
We
are still suffering from the
bursting of the housing bubble created by low interest rates, lowered
mortgage
standards, and subsidies to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Those policies
encouraged
the granting of mortgages to people who should never have gotten them
-- and
when they defaulted, the whole financial sector nearly collapsed.
Now
some people see signs that another
bubble is bursting. They call it the higher-education bubble.
For
years, government has assumed it’s
a good thing to go to college. College graduates tend to earn more
money than
non-college graduates.
Politicians
of both parties have
called for giving everybody a chance to go to college, just as they
called for
giving everybody a chance to buy a home.
So
government has been subsidizing
higher education with low-interest college loans, Pell grants, and
cheap
tuitions at state colleges and universities.
The
predictable result is that higher
education costs have risen much faster than inflation, much faster than
personal incomes, much faster than the economy over the past 40 years.
Moreover,
you can’t get out of paying
off those college loans, even by going through bankruptcy. At least
with a home
mortgage, you can walk away and let the bank foreclose and not owe any
more
money.
Peter
Thiel, the co-founder of PayPal,
is adept at spotting bubbles. He sold out for $500 million in March
2000, at
the peak of the tech bubble, when his partners wanted to hold out for
more. He
refused to buy a house until the housing bubble burst.
“A
true bubble is when something is
overvalued and intensely believed,” he has said. “Education may still
be the
only thing people still believe in in the United States.”
But
the combination of rising costs
and dubious quality may be undermining that belief.
For
what have institutions of higher
learning done with their vast increases in revenues? The answer in all
too many
cases is administrative bloat.
Take
the California State University
system, the second tier in that state’s public higher education.
Between 1975
and 2008, the number of faculty rose by 3 percent, to 12,019 positions.
During
those same years, the number of administrators rose 221 percent, to
12,183.
That’s right: There are more administrators than teachers at Cal State
now.
These
people get paid to “liaise” and
“facilitate” and produce reports on diversity. How that benefits Cal
State
students or California taxpayers is unclear.
It
is often said that American
colleges and universities are the best in the world. That’s undoubtedly
true in
the hard sciences.
But
in the humanities and to a lesser
extent in the social sciences, there’s a lot of garbage. Is a degree in
religious and women’s studies worth $100,000 in student loan debt?
Probably
not.
As
economist Richard Vedder points
out, 45 percent of those who enter four-year colleges don’t get a
degree within
six years. Given the low achievement level of most high school
graduates, it’s
hard to avoid the conclusion that many of them shouldn’t have bothered
in the
first place.
Now
consumers seem to be reading the
cues in the marketplace.
An
increasing number of students are
spending their first two years after high school in low-cost community
colleges
and then transferring to four-year schools.
A
recent New York Times story reported
that out-of-staters are flocking to low-tuition North Dakota State in
frigid
Fargo.
Politicians,
including Barack Obama,
still give lip service to the notion that everyone should go to college
and can
profit from it. And many college and university administrators may
assume that
the gravy train will go on forever.
But
that’s what Las Vegas real estate
developers and homebuilders thought in 2006. My sense is once again
well
intentioned public policy and greedy providers have produced a bubble
that is
about to burst.
Read
it at Townhall
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