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The cost of getting a college degree has risen 1,120 percent since
1978 ... far more than the cost of health care or health insurance premiums. Even with Pell grants, scholarships and other forms of financial aid, many graduates are faced with student loans that they won't be able to pay off until they are in their 50's when they have to start thinking of *their* kid's college costs. Plus, starting salaries for recent grads have dropped for the most part and many can't think about home ownership. Where are all these cost increases going? http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-15/cost-of-college-degree-in-u-s-soars-12-fold-chart-of-the-day.html |
#2
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#3
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#4
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#5
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#7
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On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 17:01:55 -0400, wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 10:01:13 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 12:00:30 -0400, wrote: College administrators are millionaires these days. You're blaming the administrators for $1T in student debt??? It is certainly part of it. Yes, a small part. How about the coaches? They make much more at the big football schools. Is it worth it? Doubtful. It's actually a hard job. They certainly deserve it more than the CEOs of BP and Exxon. They do generate the same kinds of profit. Mostly the sports programs of the big ones generate the most profits. The CEOs don't give a **** about profits. They care about shareholder value, and even then not so much as their exit strategy. |
#8
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On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 12:09:12 -0500, Boating All Out
wrote: Those "lifetime earnings" stats don't account for kids who paid up for college but didn't succeed. They end up dropping out before they finish, or finish and end up working at Starbucks. ==== Not everyone who drops out of college ends up in a dead end job. Take a look at Bill Gates and Steve Jobs for two notable examples. There are lots more. |
#9
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On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:35:51 -0400, Wayne B
wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 12:09:12 -0500, Boating All Out wrote: Those "lifetime earnings" stats don't account for kids who paid up for college but didn't succeed. They end up dropping out before they finish, or finish and end up working at Starbucks. ==== Not everyone who drops out of college ends up in a dead end job. Take a look at Bill Gates and Steve Jobs for two notable examples. There are lots more. That's true, but those who don't go are much more likely to earn many thousands less over their lifetime. More true now than ever. Even four years is just the minimum now. |
#10
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On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 22:56:36 -0400, wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 16:48:58 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 17:01:55 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 10:01:13 -0700, Urin Asshole wrote: On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 12:00:30 -0400, wrote: College administrators are millionaires these days. You're blaming the administrators for $1T in student debt??? It is certainly part of it. Yes, a small part. How about the coaches? They make much more at the big football schools. Is it worth it? Doubtful. Yes big football is also part of the problem., They are saying it will cost a couple hundred million bucks to build a football program at my local state university. It's actually a hard job. They certainly deserve it more than the CEOs of BP and Exxon. They do generate the same kinds of profit. Mostly the sports programs of the big ones generate the most profits. The CEOs don't give a **** about profits. They care about shareholder value, and even then not so much as their exit strategy. The universities also generate profits in the academic programs too. They just can't call it profit ... just like a non profit hospital. They do, but not just like a non-profit hospital. The hospitals are over the top and it's not the universities that are causing people to go bankrupt. People can choose not to go to school. They can't really choose not to go to a hospital. Just like insurance isolated patients from runaway hospital costs, easy to get student loans isolated kids from the cost of their education. It is even worse than that. The insidious thing in a student loan is, as long as you are in school, you don't have to pay on the loan. This means a BA who can't get a job is almost forced into going back to school, racking up more debt, because he can't make the payments. Then he becomes an MA, who can't get a job and he has an even higher debt he has to service. Pretty soon you end up with one of those "post docs" who can't get a job and has $100k in debt. No argument, except that this is not comparable to the non-free market that happens at hospitals. A heroin dealer does not have that good a business plan for keeping his addicts hooked. Huh? |
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