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flipshod's avatar

I agree with 99% of this, and you've described the problems well. But your case against eliminating student debt seems to be 1) it just makes the banks whole and doesn't address the underlying problems, and 2) here are all of the things we should do instead.

Given the actions pondered by the administration right now, perhaps you are right.

But to really fix things, what needs to happen is that all student loan debts be forgiven, and the creditors (banks and government) be forced to write them off.

This would require legislation, but it could be a very simple law.

All of the myriad changes you suggest would then follow, but rather than requiring numerous legislative actions, they would be worked out in the markets and politically over time as the system adjusted to what is essentially a decoupling of debt and education.

Your citation to Deuteronomy hints at one of the fundamental problems we have, namely our whole system's reliance on debt with compound interest. There is wisdom in the ancient prohibitions against usury, and we probably should count amongst our original sins the construction of a world heedless of that.

Specifically here the problem is debt with no underlying collateral. (The case for commercial debt and for purchases like housing are much stronger.)

The proposal by the Biden administration would help a few on the margins (low income people for whom 10K would have a material benefit), and for that reason alone, I'd take it as something better than nothing. Politically it will undoubtedly backfire as people perceive it as taking from the poor to help the rich (although it does neither), but at this point I have no concern for the political prospects of the Democratic Party.

I'm sure my suggestion will never happen, but I'm just as sure that your proposals will also never happen (or to the extent they do, they won't play out as intended). So if we are going to discuss hypotheticals we should talk about the real problem which is simply a political struggle between banks and the people at large.

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Klaus's avatar

One the issues right now is that we're in an inflationary period. A lot of people have their brains stuck in the Great Recession, where we needed to put any spending out there we could to put the economy back on track. I would have supported more forgiveness then, since it would have been something. But, right now, the economy is at its a capacity. Any additional spending will increase prices without increasing output. So forgiving loans to help people a buy, for instance, would just increase the price of homes, which doesn't seem very progressive.

As for the credential inflation, it seems like the best solution is to stop printing the credential. I would love a German-style system where a much smaller proportion of the population can attend college.

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