Chattanooga Times Free Press

STUDENTS MUST BE RESPONSIBL­E FOR THEIR DEBT

- Creators.com

Lending money is not, as they say, rocket science.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, in the last quarter of 2021, of the total of all outstandin­g business loans from all commercial banks, 1.08% were delinquent.

Per the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as of second quarter 2021, a little over 2% of the $1.4 trillion outstandin­g in auto loans were delinquent.

Yet in the student loan market, totaling around $1.6 trillion, not that different from the total size of the auto loan market, an average of 15% are in default at any given time, per the Education Data Initiative.

It should be clear what

the problem is.

Auto lenders make sure that those to whom they lend can and will pay back the loan. They are careful because if the borrower defaults, the lender loses.

But if President Joe Biden or Sens. Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders decide that it is not fair that there are Americans without new cars and manage to get government guarantees for auto loans, is there any doubt that there would be a dramatic rise in defaults on car loans?

Those lending wouldn’t care who they lend to because they wouldn’t take the loss on a default. You and I, we taxpayers, would, as we will if Biden and his party have their way to wipe out student loans.

Of course, “wipe out” is not the right terminolog­y. Debts don’t get wiped out. They just get transferre­d to someone else. In the case of government guarantees, that someone else is taxpayers.

The concept of student loans backed by the government is another child of the allegedly compassion­ate 1960s.

Doesn’t it make sense to help the less fortunate obtain funds to pay for college?

But as many theologian­s and philosophe­rs have noted, the greatest charitable act is to help another individual take control of their own life. Teaching personal responsibi­lity is the most valuable gift that one can provide another.

Our American compassion, our moral compass, has gone awry.

But just as inflation shows that the costs of fiscal irresponsi­bility cannot be hidden, so the costs of teaching our youth that personal responsibi­lity is irrelevant cannot be hidden.

The Wall Street Journal reported that one student loan adviser told them, “I’m seeing them say, ‘I’m going to take out more loans now and go buy GameStop stock with it because it’s going to get forgiven anyway.’”

A new Gallup survey reports “32% of currently enrolled students pursuing a bachelor’s degree report they have considered withdrawin­g from their program for a semester or more in the past six months.”

Thirty-six percent attribute this to financial reasons. But 76% attribute to “emotional stress.”

Of course, the universiti­es love this. What business wouldn’t think the government subsidizin­g purchase of its product is a great idea?

Per the American Enterprise Institute, from January 2000 to December 2021, college tuition costs increased 175% and college textbook costs increased 150%. Over the same period, the consumer price index for all items increased 65.5%; prices of cars, household furnishing­s and clothing remained relatively unchanged; and cellphone services were down 40%, computer software down 71% and television sets down 97%.

Per Education Data Initiative, highest default rate — 26.33% — is among arts and humanities majors attending nonselecti­ve schools. Can anyone really think such loans make sense?

We need to help our youth who want education to get it. But it must be done prudently.

Teaching our youth that they don’t need to pay back debts is not a good start.

Misguided efforts by Biden and his party to cancel obligation­s on student loans should be vigorously opposed.

 ?? ?? Star Parker
Star Parker

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