
Originally Posted by
MultiVerse
Of course subsidizing higher ed even more is going to increase the increasing rate of college costs. Try and make an argument where it doesn't?
Wouldn't that depend on how the subsidy is set up?
I think we agree that the current loan structure does encourage tuition inflation, much as badly structured sub prime loans did to housing.
But I think you've used a more clumsy, wide brush than normal.
Point being that before Reagan, higher ed got more federal subsidies.
In the 1970s, states paid 65 percent of the costs of college. By 2013, states covered a mere 30 percent of college costs.
...
Today’s student aid crisis has its roots in the 1980s. In 1981, the Reagan administration, with a coalition of congressional Republicans and conservative Democrats, pushed through Congress a combination of tax- and budget-cutting measures.
No federal program suffered deeper cuts than student aid. Spending on higher education was slashed by some 25 percent between 1980 and 1985. In raw dollar figures, cuts totaled $594 million in student assistance and $338 million in Pell grants. Students eligible for grant assistance freshmen year had to take out student loans to cover their second year. For middle-class families, eligibility was changed as well. Low-cost, low-interest, subsidized federal loans were limited to families with household incomes of less than $32,000, regardless of family size.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poste...-blame-reagan/
My tuition at one of these derided snooty liburahl ahts colleges where I wrote a thesis in the most useless math - Algebraic Topology, was $3200 in 1974. It's now around $80000.
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