We have 115,520 janitors in the United States with bachelor's degrees or more
Another school
year beckons, which means it's time for President Obama to go on another
college retreat. "He loves college tours," says Ohio University's
Richard Vedder, who directs the Center for College Affordability and
Productivity. "Colleges are an escape from reality. Believe me, I've lived
in one for half a century. It's like living in Disneyland. They're these little
isolated enclaves of nonreality."
Mr. Vedder, age
72, has taught college economics since 1965 and published papers on the likes
of Scandinavian migration, racial disparities in unemployment and tax reform.
Over the last decade he's made himself America's foremost expert on the
economics of higher education, which he distilled in his 2004 book "Going
Broke by Degree: Why College Costs Too Much." His analysis isn't the same
as President Obama's.
This week on his
back-to-school tour of New York and Pennsylvania colleges, Mr. Obama presented
a new plan to make college more affordable. "If the federal government
keeps on putting more and more money in the system," he noted at the State
University of New York at Buffalo on Thursday, and "if the cost is going up
by 250%" and "tax revenues aren't going up 250%," at "some
point, the government will run out of money."
Note that for the
record: Mr. Obama has admitted some theoretical limit to how much the federal
government can spend.
His solution
consists of tying financial aid to college performance, using government funds
as a "catalyst to innovation," and making it easier for borrowers to
discharge their debts. "In fairness to the president, some of his ideas
make some decent, even good sense," Mr. Vedder says, such as providing
students with more information about college costs and graduation rates. But
his plan addresses just "the tip of the iceberg. He's not dealing with the
fundamental problems."
College costs have
continued to explode despite 50 years of ostensibly benevolent government
interventions, according to Mr. Vedder, and the president's new plan could
exacerbate the trend. By Mr. Vedder's lights, the cost conundrum started with
the Higher Education Act of 1965, a Great Society program that created federal
scholarships and low-interest loans aimed at making college more accessible.
In 1964, federal
student aid was a mere $231 million. By 1981, the feds were spending $7 billion
on loans alone, an amount that doubled during the 1980s and nearly tripled in
each of the following two decades, and is about $105 billion today. Taxpayers
now stand behind nearly $1 trillion in student loans.
Meanwhile, grants
have increased to $49 billion from $6.4 billion in 1981. By expanding
eligibility and boosting the maximum Pell Grant by $500 to $5,350, the 2009
stimulus bill accelerated higher ed's evolution into a middle-class entitlement.
Fewer than 2% of Pell Grant recipients came from families making between
$60,000 and $80,000 a year in 2007. Now roughly 18% do.


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