Monday, February 10, 2020
College Costs in the US Compared to Some Other Countries
Students
in the US spend more on college than almost any other country, according to the
2018 Education at a Glance report from the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD). In the US, college costs have significantly
increased every year for at least three decades. When it comes to the price of
an education, the US is in a class of its own. Compared to the rest of the
world, spending per student in the US is outrageously high, and has almost no
relationship to the value that students get in exchange.
Today,
fully one third of all developed countries have free college for their
citizens. And another third has very low tuition (less than $2,400 per year). But
in America, college is now the second-largest expense a person will incur in a
lifetime, second only to buying a house. In fact, increasing tuition and
fees at American colleges have made college too expensive for many families. On
average, US college students now graduate with more than $35,000 of debt. And
did you know that more than half of the students who enroll in US colleges do not
ever finish a degree? Each year millions of American college students
leave college with no degree, but with thousands of dollars of debt. Surprisingly,
almost forty percent of college students consider dropping out just to
avoid more student loan debt. In addition, more than three million older
Americans struggle to survive under crushing student loan debt. It is shocking
but true: thousands of senior citizens in the US are forced to give up their
Social Security checks because of student loan debt. Nowadays, the
staggering cost of a college education in America causes many young people
to wonder whether college is worth the expense.
But in spite of all this, many people in America still do
not know that in lots of countries around the world today, college is either
free or almost free. And contrary to what you might expect, studying abroad can
actually save you money. As the cost of US colleges continues to rise, many
Americans are turning to universities in other countries for their education.
Europe is popular because many countries there offer free tuition. Some of these
countries—like Slovenia, Norway and Germany—even offer free tuition to international
students. And, even when non-EU students are charged tuition and fees, these
costs are much lower than at US colleges and universities. Add to that the low
cost of living in most European countries, and it’s clear why more and more Americans
today get their degrees in Europe. According to data from the Institute of
International Education, about 50,000 U.S. students are currently pursuing full
degrees abroad, with more than half of them studying in the U.K. and Canada. But
in countries like Sweden and Germany, students attend university entirely free
of charge. And colleges in France and Switzerland also offer extremely low
tuition and, as a result, only a small percentage of students graduate
with student loan debt. Even when you add the cost of traveling overseas,
college in Europe is less expensive than a private college in the US.
In the
US public system, the high cost of college has a lot to do with politics. Most
state legislatures now spend much less per student than they did thirty years
ago. Brainwashed by the ideology of small government, states are more and more forcing
American public universities to beg for funds. Cuts in funding were especially
deep following the 2008 recession, and the easiest way for universities to make
up for the cuts was to shift most of their costs to students. The
rationalization offered along with these funding cuts is always the same,
namely that the cuts will just make colleges more efficient. But unfortunately,
budget cuts have instead made many public colleges behave more and more like
profit-hungry corporations. And—unlike many other countries—the US has no
workable system for controlling price increases.
Some students may imagine that the way things are now is
somehow ‘natural’ or inevitable. But many professors remember that things used
to be different in the US, at least until the late 1970s. In New York,
Governor Cuomo has committed to making undergraduate education at the
City University of New York (CUNY) and the State University of New York (SUNY)
entirely free for students from families that earn less than $120,000 per year.
And in 2014, Tennessee’s governor Bill Haslam agreed to provide free
community college to all state residents. Today Tennessee is model state
in this regard.
America was once the world leader in producing talented
and hardworking college graduates. But today, unaffordability and limited
access have created a situation in which a college education in the US simply
is not worth the expense for many families. How can we remedy this? If we
really want to make America great again, then we should consider the total
financial burden that students—and their parents—face. And we should provide students
with all of the financial support that is necessary for them to complete their
degree without student debt. This could easily be done.
We could make higher education a right for all, and
cancel all student debt for an estimated $2.2 trillion. To pay for this, we
could impose a tax of a fraction of a percent on the same Wall Street
speculators who nearly destroyed the economy in 2008. This Wall Street
speculation tax would raise $2.4 trillion over the next ten years. It
would place a tiny 0.5 percent tax on stock trades. This is only 50 cents on
every $100 of stock. Wall Street was bailed out for several trillion dollars.
So why can’t 45 million Americans be bailed out from the $1.5 trillion burden
of student loan debt? Today, many other countries in the world still have a
similar tax, including China, the UK, Hong Kong, South Korea, Brazil, Switzerland,
Germany, and France.
It is
no accident that these countries are not facing the kind of crisis in higher
education that we face here in America.
What Does the Future Hold for US-Bolivia Ties?
Mark Weisbrot. CEPR. February 8, 2020
The Trump administration’s current and future behavior in Bolivia can best be forecast by its strong support for the military coup that overthrew the democratically elected government of Evo Morales on November 10. And no one disputes that Morales was democratically elected to his term that began in 2015.
The OAS is lying and cannot defend its accusations.
But there’s more: the Organization of American States (OAS), whose leadership under Secretary General Luis Almagro is strongly influenced by Trump and Senator Marco Rubio, played a leading role in the coup that brought this violent, repressive, racist, anti-indigenous government to power. The OAS did this by repeatedly claiming, falsely, or implying, that the Morales government committed fraud in the October 20 election.
One hundred and thirty-six economists and statisticians said the OAS charges were false. Members of the US Congress demanded answers from the OAS for their false accusations. Journalists have also tried to ask questions. All have gone unanswered for more than three months. Why? Because the OAS is lying and cannot defend its accusations.
The treatment of these transparent falsehoods—only eighth-grade arithmetic is necessary to understand them—by many US-based NGOs that claim to support “human rights” and “democracy,” is disgraceful. The same goes for most of the US media, including the editorial board of The New York Times, which for the first time in 17 years supported a military coup—provoking an angry response from more than 300 academic experts. The truth will come out.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)