I'd rather it not be essential for a decent shot at a good life in the first place. Making it free is a temporary solution and won't fix anything in the long run.
What exactly is an undergraduate education?
I cautiously support this. I absolutely support taxpayer-subsidized community college, because that also supports people who aren't on the college track and rather focus on trades.
I'd rather it not be essential for a decent shot at a good life in the first place.
No. Nothing is "free".
- University students, right down to undergrads, are not cost-constrained. The use of tuition loans insulates them from their eventual debt burden; the actual problem is that the students can't declare themselves bankrupt if they're unable to pay it back.
encouraging more people to go to college by making it 'free' would spur credential inflation.
The positive externalities of higher education is quite free, so forcing other people to pay for somebody's education just seems rather wrong.
unfortunately something like this is never going to happen in the near future, because when the majority of americans hear the words "more taxes" they flip out and veto that policy to hell.
Quote from: 🍄Tryptameme🍄 on August 11, 2015, 09:52:24 PMunfortunately something like this is never going to happen in the near future, because when the majority of americans hear the words "more taxes" they flip out and veto that policy to hell.I would be PROUD knowing that my tax dollars are helping build the next generation of doctors, engineers, and scientists. Yes, even the humble writers and artists. Fuck anyone who wouldn't be. Like, FUCK them. Fuck them with every object within reach.
This brings up an interesting caveat; would you (or anyone else reading this) support free tuition for "essential" degrees like technical and medical fields, while disregarding others like arts?
I would only consider that part of the problem. I don't know--you say they're not "cost-constrained" in one breath, and then point out that they can't declare bankruptcy in the next.
Also, I'm ignorant. If you could walk me through in a few words what'll happen to you when you DO file for bankruptcy?
All it does is make it accessible, which it very well goddamn ought to be.
If more people come to college because of its accessibility... who cares?
and please name a few of these positive externalities that i should be concerned about
The lack of cost-constraints just means that the price of tuition doesn't deter people from going through higher education. Credit is highly available in both the US and the UK higher education systems.
The point is that you can't file for bankruptcy.
It is accessible.
QuoteIf more people come to college because of its accessibility... who cares?Everybody should if it makes their degrees fucking worthless.
I meant to say the positive externalities are minimal; like, pollution is a negative externality because it incurs costs on third-parties not involved in the transaction. In the same vein, college education doesn't incur any substantial benefits on third-parties not involved in the transaction, so funding HE through taxation is rather pointless and I'd say immoral. You're taking money from other people to fund something they will see minimal benefit from.