Washington County Enterprise-Leader

High College Tuitions Burden Graduates With Debt

- Chuck Collins CHUCK COLLINS IS A SENIOR SCHOLAR AT THE INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES (IPS-DC.ORG) AND THE CO-AUTHOR, WITH BILL GATES SR., OF WEALTH AND OUR COMMONWEAL­TH: WHY AMERICA SHOULD TAX ACCUMULATE­D FORTUNES.

Indebted students are a force to be reckoned with.

There’s a generation­al time-bomb ticking — and the student debt crisis is the trip wire.

Adults younger than 35 disproport­ionately bear the brunt of escalating inequality.

America’s educated youth are graduating into an economy with stagnant wages and a torn safety net. Federal and state budget cuts, meanwhile, have spiked tuition costs and cut public services that aid young workers, such as transporta­tion and affordable housing.

A rumble of legitimate discontent is mounting from the 40 million Americans saddled with student debt totaling $ 1.16 trillion — a number expected to increase to $2 trillion by 2022. College debt now touches one in five U.S. households and exceeds total credit card indebtedne­ss.

The most frustrated students are blocking highways over tuition hikes. Others are launching “debt strikes” by refusing to pay the for-profit schools that bilked them.

Many more are defaulting after facing the stressful realizatio­n that they can’t find a job that pays enough to repay their debt. Over half of outstandin­g student loans are presently in deferral, delinquenc­y, or default.

The student debt debacle has huge implicatio­ns for the future. The average college graduate is now almost $ 30,000 underwater, with some on the hook for over $100,000.

This debt keeps young people from starting families, buying houses, and taking risks on new businesses. It also exacerbate­s the growing problem of wealth inequality and declining social mobility, since it gives debt- free graduates from wealthier families an enormous head start over their peers.

Many baby boomers without kids in college don’t fully appreciate how the economy is tilted against the rising generation — or how much higher education financing has changed from previous generation­s.

Since the 1970s, tuition rates have risen over 1,000 percent, while state funding of universiti­es has declined by 40 percent. And the proportion of young Amer- icans with education debt more than quadrupled, from 5 percent to 22 percent.

The powerful student loan industry lobbied for — and got — draconian laws that penalize student debtors more than people holding mortgages, car loans, or credit cards. Servicers can garnish young graduates’ wages and disability payments to get their due.

And not even bankruptcy can cancel out these loans.

In some states, student debtors who fall into default can lose their profession­al certificat­ions and even their driver’s licenses. Imagine borrowing money to get a nursing or cosmetolog­y degree, falling behind in your payments, and having your source of livelihood revoked.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Other countries have offered free public higher education for decades.

In the 30 years after World War II, the government expanded access to debtfree college for millions of Americans. These included GI Bill recipients, but also millions of men and women without military service records who attended the great public universiti­es of our land, paying a tuition bill they could afford with only a summer job.

Lawmakers should reverse the cycle of state budget cuts in higher education that shift tuition costs onto students and their cash- strapped families. Some states are considerin­g creating “opportunit­y trust funds,” capitalize­d by state estate taxes on the richest 1 percent, to finance debt-free public education.

The national Strike Debt movement calls on Congress to spend an additional $15 billion a year to make public education free. They could accomplish this by cutting out for-profit colleges and the parasitica­l college loan industry, and by simplifyin­g the existing labyrinth of education subsidies.

The vast majority of college debtors still suffer in isolation, viewing their struggle as a personal problem, not a societal issue. But this is about to change. When college debt borrowers wake up and flex their political muscles, they’ll be a force to be reckoned with.

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