Albuquerque Journal

Clinton’s free college plan is costly, irresponsi­ble entitlemen­t

- BY VICKI ALGER TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Vicki Alger is a research fellow at the Independen­t Institute, a libertaria­n conservati­ve think tank, and author of the new book, “Failure: The Federal Misedukati­on of America’s Children.”

Hillary Clinton’s free college plan is long on promises but short on specifics — like who will pay for it.

Maybe the Clinton Foundation could foot the bill. After all, it received at least $500,000 from Arizona State University, not to mention tens of millions more from 180 other donors who lobbied the State Department when Clinton was in charge.

If there’s one thing the Clintons understand, it’s how to generate free cash.

But not even the Clinton Foundation, with nearly $333 million in reported net assets, could afford Clinton’s college giveaway, which she projects will cost $350 billion over the next 10 years.

Under the plan, officially dubbed the New College Compact, in-state tuition at public two-year and four-year colleges and universiti­es would be free for students whose families earn $125,000 or less annually, roughly 80 percent of all American families.

The remaining 20 percent of American families, the supposed rich under Clinton’s plan, would foot the bill.

Additional tax funds, interest rate cuts, repayment caps and loan forgivenes­s schemes would be used to make college a virtually debt-free experience.

The projected cost of Clinton’s higher education free-for-all is bad enough. But it is probably just a down payment.

In reality, the plan doesn’t come close to covering public tuition and fees, which now total more than $70 billion annually — twice the projected yearly cost of Clinton’s plan. Nor would it fix the staggering student loan debt problem, which currently exceeds $1.3 trillion.

One of the worst elements of the plan is that college degrees will become about as meaningles­s as free high school diplomas.

About 75 percent of U.S. high school graduates who took the ACT from 2010 to 2014 were not deemed college-ready in all four subjects of English, reading, math and science, according to an ACT report.

Many of those who go on to college have to enroll in remedial classes, increasing the likelihood they’ll drop out. The proposed Clinton subsidies will encourage more of the same.

If the past six decades have taught us anything, it’s that we can’t subsidize our way to college affordabil­ity, much less quality. The federal government’s reach into education has grown steadily since 1958, and with it, college costs that have increased at about twice the general inflation rate.

That’s because federal subsidies allow colleges and universiti­es to increase prices with impunity. For all of Washington’s finger wagging, few politician­s are going to support withholdin­g — much less cutting — federal aid. And colleges know it.

Perhaps the greatest cost of all to Clinton’s free college plan is nurturing the notion that a college degree is an entitlemen­t, not something earned.

At most public colleges and universiti­es, the majority of undergradu­ates already get financial aid. And what are taxpayers getting for their investment?

In the past year or so alone, students at the University of California at San Diego had time for a topless “Free the Nipple” rally.

California Polytechni­c State University students organized a three-day “S--- In” to promote gender-neutral bathrooms.

Students at the University of Texas at Austin traded in their longhorns for sex toys to protest a new campus carry law.

Such activities are taking place on campuses nationwide, largely on the taxpayers’ dime, at a time when an alarming majority of professors report their first-year college students can’t distinguis­h between fact and opinion, and at least 20 percent of undergradu­ates won’t complete their fouryear degrees in six years.

With federal debt quickly approachin­g $20 trillion, Clinton’s proposed giveaway is something our country can’t afford.

Yet the full cost of the Clinton plan can’t be measured entirely in dollars and cents.

Indeed, the full cost is incalculab­le because Clinton is trying to satisfy an insatiable appetite for entitlemen­ts that feeds off the hard work and sacrifice of others and is constantly demanding more.

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