Now suppose these were my answers: I
want to write short stories and poetry. I have no business plan, other than to
write what I want and send things out when I can. I have done no research
whatsoever, other than to read poems and short stories. I have a bachelor’s
degree in recombinant gene technology.
What are the odds that I would get a
business loan?
Yet, when students want to get a
student loan, these questions are not even asked. If they were, when I decided
to drop out of a Master’s program in biology to pursue a Master’s degree in
creative writing and, later, a Ph.D. in the humanities, it seems highly unlikely
I would have been given the loans I sought. Or, if I were granted loans, they
would have been at very high interest rates – high enough to perhaps make me
reconsider the wisdom of taking out loans for the degrees I sought. I may have
perhaps decided to change course and get the degrees I now have anyway, but it
would have been done without student loans – which certainly would have
benefitted me over the long term.
But this is more than a personal
issue. What do you think would happen if student loans were given out like
business loans? I find it hard to believe that engineering majors, business
majors, education majors, and poetry majors would all receive the same amounts
of money at the same interest rates. Who would be willing to invest in an
engineering major with good math skills and a clear set of career goals?
Practically everyone. Who would be willing to invest in a poetry major, even
with good writing skills and a clear set of career goals? Practically no one.
Why? The return on investment of the former is much clearer, more obvious, than
the return on investment of the latter.
But wouldn’t this result in fewer
poetry majors? Fewer English majors? Fewer humanities majors? Of course it
would. We grossly overproduce graduates in these majors, as evidenced by the
fact that the vast majority of these graduates cannot get jobs even remotely
connected to their majors. And the reason why is that it literally costs the
same to get a degree in English as it does to get a degree in engineering. Both
the English graduate and the engineering graduate will have the same student
loan debt, though the former is in far less demand and will be paid far less,
while the latter is in much greater demand and will be paid much more. This
would seem to result in more of the latter than the former, yet we have to take
into consideration both the fact that people discount the future and often take
the path of least resistance in the near future. The costs to getting a degree
in English simply are not high enough, which is why we have far more English
majors than the market demands.
There are several consequences to
this. One is that with large numbers of people going into fields like English,
the average quality of graduates goes down. Another is the creation of downward
pressure on wages for those with English degrees. This is what has caused
universities and colleges to start using adjuncts at such high levels. Why hire
a full time professor or lecturer, when you can hire an adjunct for half the
wage? And you can do that because there are so many people out there with
Master’s and Ph.D.’s in English competing for these jobs that wages are bid
lower and lower. Yet, the universities continue to raise tuition more and more,
suggesting they have the funds to pay more. But just because one has the funds,
that does not mean one has to pay more. Or will pay more. Why would you, if you
don’t have to? Even universities respond to economic incentives.
The fact that universities respond
to economic incentives also explains why tuition keeps going up. With the
existence of cheap money in the form of student loans (students see it as cheap
money because they do not typically think about the fact that they have to pay
all this money back in the future – they are not rational calculators, but
rather future-discounters), universities find an increase demand for their
services. The customers in this case are budding up prices. And when the
universities raise prices, students borrow even more money. The result is
spiraling price increases.
As we can see, cheap money in the
form of easy-to-get student loans results in overproduction (of certain
majors), misallocation of resources (from more difficult to easier majors), and
increased prices. In other words, we get a bubble. If history is any guide, the
production of highly educated, unemployable or underemployable people results
in social unrest – even revolutions. Our student loan system, as practiced,
creates people who cannot be employed in their fields, which in turn creates
and will create resentment in those people toward the economic system in
particular and civil society in general. It happened in a small scale in the
late 1960s with the G.I. Bill. As I noted before, it happened in Tunisia and
Egypt with their higher education financing system.
The
U.S. is facing this situation on an even grander scale. Worse, unlike in Egypt,
where the graduates simply were left unable to get work that matched their
degrees, here in the U.S. the graduates not only cannot get work that match
their degrees, they are shackled with considerable debt which, due to our laws,
they can never get out from under outside of paying that debt. Which is made
doubly difficult by the fact that they cannot get jobs that pay enough to pay
down the debt.
Indeed,
this has been the situation I have been in for a while now. I graduated in 2004
with a Ph.D. in the humanities. In that time I have been unemployed for several
years, I have worked adjunct at two community colleges and a university, I have
worked as a hotel front desk clerk, and I have done a little consulting. It was
only this past Fall semester (2013) that I started my first full time job that
had anything to do with my degree. Nine years to get a full time job – as a
Lecturer. It would probably not surprise you to learn that, yes, I did in fact
feel a great deal of resentment toward society during this time. Yet that was
kept in check by my understanding of economics. Without that, I would have
surely done as most of my fellow humanities graduates have done and blame
capitalism for all my problems. Instead, I recognize the set of incentives that
allowed me to make a series of poor financial decisions. I love the fact that I
have a Ph.D. in the humanities, and I love the fact that that allows me to do
all of the scholarly and artistic work I love to do. But I do not love the fact
that our student loan system created a situation where I could not get full
time employment for almost a decade (and even so, as a lecturer, it is a
year-by-year contract, and it is entirely for teaching and not for doing
scholarly and artistic work) and which shackled me with loans I may never be
able to pay off.
3 comments:
You might be wrong about the philosophy and poetry majors not being able to get students loans. Lenders only care about the chances that loan will be repaid. Almost all college grads will have the ability to pay back even $200,000 loans. A conscientious person can pay back a fairly big loan working at Starbucks.
You might consider why it is that the federal government made it impossible for people to default on their student loans. It might be because the defaults were very high. Certainly if the only thing you have to worry about is paying back your loan, it's not a big deal. But when you throw in a mortgage, car payments, insurances, bills, expenses involved in raising children, etc., it suddenly becomes extremely difficult to pay back the loan. Especially since the average person with a Ph.D. -- particularly English and philosophy and other such majors -- can't do much better than get an adjunct position. And other jobs are hard to come by because of the "too qualified" phenomenon.
The fact is that too many degrees have a very poor return on investment. If you can get one of the handful of full time jobs in that area, you're golden, but if you can't, you're screwed.
I agree: higher education is soooooo obviously a bubble. And semi recent rioting in Europe as well as the Arab Spring has shown us that unemployed and entitled young graduates can get real nasty; is that what a busting education bubble looks like? Hopefully the post-bitcoin person is more liable to blame fiat currency than Jews (Hitler scape-goated Versailles-induced hyperinflation on the Jews) or Wallstreet
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