11/30/2012 1:15:42 PM
I had to do a double take on who the OP is, but yes, I agree completely, the student loan market will crash, they're going just as free and loose as the housing market was in it's prime. I do think it will take a while longer, but when it crashes, it'll foot taxpayers with a lot of the bill, and students with the rest. All that needs to happen to fix it is easy, let people get out of it with bankruptcy. Then student loans dry up and colleges are forced to roll back costs.
11/30/2012 2:05:04 PM
Yes.We will see many, many, many 20 somethings with jacked up credit, and no money, and no hope to repay their debt within the next 20 years. Some of the companies that ARE actually hiring entry level positions will skip over these folks. This will cause them to start their real careers even later.Down the road, this will lead to fewer 30 somethings starting families, buying houses, buying cars, supporting their local economy, etc... These "younger people" will slowly start to realize just how much their generation got the shaft.
11/30/2012 2:05:06 PM
11/30/2012 2:07:48 PM
the difference between this and a reasonable thread is when he starts posting about how this was done on purpose in order to enslave people for the new world order
11/30/2012 2:09:20 PM
That's funny you say that because I believe there is no way they could have not known that giving out loans to anyone and everyone wouldn't yield this result.
11/30/2012 2:15:16 PM
11/30/2012 2:17:26 PM
I wish I could know exactly how this is going to play out. I'm aggressively paying off my student loan, but if there is some kind of bullshit "forgiveness" program a couple years after I finish paying it off I'll be pissed.
11/30/2012 3:29:20 PM
11/30/2012 3:32:17 PM
^^depends on if your loans are public or private, if they're private, there might be some chance of principal forgiveness, but it's unlikley, probably just longer forberence or lowered intrest rate, if it's public, the only relief I could see offered would be some sort of bankruptcy deal, in which case I'd still go with paying it off.The government actually did a decent job with making the mortgage adjustments only benefit the people who never should have been given the loans in the first place, I'd imagine they'd do the same on this.
11/30/2012 3:56:56 PM
It's due sooner or later, but zerohedge is kind of a joke. I'll pay attention to their predictions when they actually start owning up to their failed past ones.
11/30/2012 3:59:29 PM
^.
11/30/2012 4:01:03 PM
It's ridiculous to say the bubble "has" burst. The housing bubble didn't burst when forclosures went up, it burst when house prices went down. When there's some movement in student interest rates we can start saying the bubble "has" burst, untill then it's just "the bubble will burst".
11/30/2012 4:12:04 PM
11/30/2012 4:26:27 PM
I would think the government's approach to this would be less heavy-handed considering the housing thing is a few people having to rent a little bit longer whereas this would prevent young people from getting an education.
11/30/2012 4:28:23 PM
let's discuss what it will look like when it bursts
11/30/2012 4:30:09 PM
^^in this case, simply allowing debt discharges would probably effectively choke off the availability of the loans...what bank is going to give an 18 year old with no assets a 100k loan that provides no real collateral w/o the government assurance that the borrower can never shed the debt?
11/30/2012 4:40:28 PM
If I had to guess, I'd say a major drop in tuition costs and closing/downsizing of universities. Public universities, being subsidized, might be less affected by this at first.
11/30/2012 4:44:05 PM
^ Agreed. I think what we're going to see is a culling of mid-tier private universities. The top dogs (your Harvards, MITs, etc.) will survive, but these smaller, lesser known institutions are going to have a hard time justifying their tuition in an environment where people will seriously question the benefits of paying more for a private school. I think public universities will survive though perhaps transformed.I'm curious to see if this changes people's attitudes towards the benefits of college education in general. Though there are a few naysayers, the overriding dogma still argues that a college degree is a magical key to success. Also wonder what will happen when this current boom of college age students end and overall university enrollment numbers contract with the population, adding further pressure on universities.
11/30/2012 5:09:04 PM
Do you think states will restore funding that has been cut for state universities?
11/30/2012 5:41:24 PM
11/30/2012 5:59:21 PM
11/30/2012 7:41:25 PM
Secondary educations yes Four-year degrees noBachelor degrees have been put up on a pedastal in our child development culture. Yes, they are excellent assets to gainful employment, but they are not a requirement. Vocational educations are accessible, cheap and provide immediate access to middle-classmenship. There is little or no advocacy for that kind of career path in schools, but the standard of living afforded by these careers is often higher than that of careers stemming from four-year liberal arts degrees.
11/30/2012 9:14:37 PM
^^We also need more employment opportunities in the STEM fields; this is mostly a problem for advanced degrees, however.
11/30/2012 9:31:41 PM
12/1/2012 11:53:59 AM
12/1/2012 11:58:15 AM
Read my previous posts in this thread for context
12/1/2012 12:00:01 PM
12/1/2012 4:56:36 PM
lol at zerohedge being a joke. There isnt a person in the industry that doesn't read zerohedge. They are always the ones breaking the big news stories days/weeks/months in advance.
12/1/2012 5:32:39 PM
Easy Financing allows Costs to Skyrocket.If we have learned anything, its that we haven't learned anything at all. I know a girl working at a local retail store, who has like six figure student loan debt, and went to NCSU for like 6-7 years, kept changing majors, did not graduate, took as much out as possible (housing, meals, etc) hardly worked. She is back living with parents, working FT and her student loan payment = the majority of her check. There has to be a better balance between keeping college affordable, and enabling stupid irresponsible borrowing that will never be paid back.
12/4/2012 6:22:12 PM
12/4/2012 9:31:58 PM
India's Bold Solution to the U.S. College Crisis: Federal Universitieshttp://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/11/indias-bold-solution-to-the-us-college-crisis-federal-universities/265343/Good read. I'm dating someone who went through the Indian Federal University program and she's pretty darn bright!
12/5/2012 8:54:08 AM
Zerohedge is a website for people who huff paint.
12/5/2012 8:55:29 AM
Sometimes they even break stories that other outlets don't report at all, because they never end up happening at all! Now THAT'S bold, daring journalism.
12/5/2012 8:56:49 AM
^^^ I don't buy the idea of a Federal university system. The only advantage I would see is that the universities might be shielded from the broader fluctuations that state budgets suffer from.However, I don't think it's going to make a difference. We already have a very massive system of large, heavily subsidized public universities, several of which could go toe-to-toe with some of the best universities in the world, and those have done nothing to place any sort of downward pressure on average college tuition. Do we really think that adding another dozen or so public universities would really make a difference in the grand scheme of things from a market perspective?Also, if the Federal government is going to start running their own university system, would it a) create disincentives for states to bother maintaining their own systems if the Feds build one in their state and b) would there be eventual pressure to funnel Federal research funds to national universities?If you want the Federal government to step and do something, you should attack from the angle of Federal research money. Use that as a tool to force universities, particularly private institutions, to provide greater visibility into their finances and then develop incentives to push universities to become more lean and efficient (there's a lot of talk already about administrative bloat).
12/5/2012 1:30:38 PM
I'm skeptical that the idea of federal universities would even pass a constitutionality test.
12/5/2012 1:33:14 PM
To quote the article re: State Schools:
12/5/2012 1:37:04 PM
Not with the current SC.
12/5/2012 1:48:29 PM
^When SCOTUS adopted the ruling in US v. Butler back in the FDR administration, it pretty much gave congress plenary power to tax and spend (ie, general welfare) as it so chooses.This Hamiltonian take on the general welfare clause has been widely accepted in jurisprudence since that time, regardless of the make-up of the court. Thus while you may say "not with this court," you're actually wrong to be that dismissive.Sure, Scalia, Thomas, and Alito would dissent citing the opposing limited Jeffersonian view on the General Welfare clause, but I'm 99.9% sure Roberts and Kennedy both would heed the precedent that's been observed for nearly 75 years.So Str8Foolish's defense of a Federal University via the General Welfare clause has a good chance of being upheld when viewed through the lens of the congressional tax and spend power.
12/5/2012 3:43:37 PM
I think the establishment of a federal university system would be sufficiently unprecedented to the point where its judicial legitimization would not be a foregone conclusion. Education is the biggest and last domain that state governments really handle. You could make the argument, and lots of people would, that transferring the responsibility of running universities to the hands of the federal government would be the nail in the coffin of dual federalism.
12/5/2012 3:53:33 PM
As to the STEM degrees argument. In our department in RTP we have hired something like 30 people in the last 6 months and are set to bring more in after the new year. And to give an idea of scale there were something like 95-100 before the hiring run. Over of half of those are new college hires.
12/5/2012 3:57:22 PM
12/5/2012 6:55:17 PM
States didn't have the kind of control over healthcare 10 years ago that they currently have over education. Education is the last thing that states are expected to operate. They will not give it up easily, and the conservatives on the court will not let it go without a fight. Like I said, it would be close but it's definitely not an open and shut case.
12/5/2012 7:00:36 PM
12/5/2012 11:08:19 PM
Evolution not taught at federal universities. or whatever the political fad of the time says.
12/5/2012 11:15:11 PM
I don't see why a Federal University system means ending the State system? Why can't we have both? It's not like the education market is super-duper saturated with cheaper-than-private options.
12/6/2012 10:36:04 AM
12/6/2012 11:41:11 AM
Yeah because the Federal aspect is totally the key aspect in K-12. Not the State-based curriculums, or the municipality-based funding and administration.The key indicator of the quality of education is local property taxes, aka local wealth. Inequality has skyrocketed over the past 30 years, and the average quality of education, not surprisingly at all, has dropped as the fewer and fewer (as a proportion) wealthy people move into economically segregated enclaves.Just look here at that darn Federal K-12 system:Take something like this next chart, keep in mind the funding of schools through local property taxes, combine that with increasing inequality, and it's no surprise that the average scores over the nation drop:Destroyer, I know you love each and every opportunity to attribute a problem to the Federal government, this is not a case of that and it'd demonstrate some actual discretion and critical thinking on your part to admit so.[Edited on December 6, 2012 at 11:52 AM. Reason : .]
12/6/2012 11:43:37 AM
12/6/2012 11:52:34 AM
So the housing bubble bursts, the economy crashes because so much of it is tied to the housing market, and people lose their homes.When the student loan bubble bursts, what happens? No one will get kicked out of their homes, nothing is crashing. The economic recovery will continue to be sluggish because we have a generation of people who can't afford to buy a house right away, and there are lots of reasons this is bad, but is it really a bubble? What does it look like?
12/6/2012 1:09:51 PM