President Obama Announces Plan To Boost College Tuitions
by
Peter Schiff
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Coming to
the aid of the higher education industry that had begun to show
some concerns that students may no longer be able to afford skyrocketing
tuition rates, President Obama today announced a plan that will
ensure students are able to commit to higher levels of federally
backed student loans. By limiting student obligations to repay,
and by passing more of the repayment burden onto taxpayers, colleges
and universities will be able to continue to raise tuitions at a
rate that outpaces nearly every other cost center in the American
economy. The move will come as a great relief to the education establishment
who otherwise may have needed to cut or cap tuitions.
The Obama plan
limits repayment obligations to just 10% of "discretionary
income" which it defines as total income above 150% of the
federal poverty level (currently translating to about $16,000 for
an individual, or $33,500 for a family of four). The plan also limits
the term of obligation to 20 years. These terms represent a substantial
easing and acceleration of the terms in Obama's "Pay as You
Earn Plan," which was just announced last year (see April 2010
critique).
That plan,
which was scheduled to begin in 2014, represented the first time
the government had imposed any limits on repayment obligations.
It had capped repayments at 15% of discretionary income for 25 years.
Assuming that
a successful college graduate would earn, on average, $80,000 per
year over the course of the 20-year obligation period, the repayment
burden under the new plan will total somewhere around $4,500 per
year, or $90,000 for the life of the loan. A less successful graduate
who earns say $50,000 per year, on average over the 20-year obligation
period, would have a repayment burden of just $1,500 per year, or
just $30,000 over the life of the loan. Any loan amounts above those
totals will be forgiven.
As a result,
students need not fear the inability to repay large loans. They
need not worry about future interest rate increases, which could
raise their payments. More importantly, students will feel diminished
pressure to obtain high paying jobs. In fact, the less a graduate
earns, the greater the amount of loan forgiveness. For the majority
of students, who don't become very high earners, it will make little
difference if loan amounts are $90,000, $180,000 or even more. As
the repayment burden will be capped to a percentage of average income,
loan repayments will be the same for any loan beyond a certain threshold.
These policies
could remove all barriers for larger and larger loans, which will
then allow universities to charge higher and higher tuitions. This
will permit them to maintain their bloated administration infrastructures
and will allow them to continue loading up their campuses with even
fancier facilities such as gymnasiums, performing arts centers,
food courts, and health centers. The day of reckoning in which the
higher education system would have had to offer programs that fit
into the budget of average Americans has been postponed, if not
entirely eliminated.
Of course the
losers in this new arrangement will be American taxpayers who will
be on the hook for the unpaid balances. Recently, college loan debt
passed credit card debt as the largest, non-mortgage, source of
debt in the United States. The balance of these unpaid student loans
will be thrown onto the pile of America's escalating unfunded debt.
Of course, the moral hazard implicit in the program means these
liabilities will now pile up even faster. In addition, the program
substantially increases the interest rate risk to which taxpayers
are already over-exposed due to the short maturities of the national
debt. The higher student loan interest rates rise, the larger the
unpaid balances that taxpayers will be forced to assume.
Obama's move
is likely to set off a student loan forgiveness arms race in which
politicians may continue to ease and cap loan repayment obligations.
With nearly a trillion dollars of outstanding college debt rapidly
increasing, debt forgiveness for the young could be the political
equivalent of protecting social security for the elderly. If college
students were willing to rack up this much debt under the assumption
they would have to actually pay it back, imagine how much debt they
will be willing to amass now that they realize they do not? As a
result, expect college tuition increases to not only continue but
to accelerate.
In a way, Obama
would be turning higher education in to a third-party payer system
(not too dissimilar from our current health care system which
is also characterized by outsized cost increases). Under this new
system, colleges might charge whatever they want because their customers
simply turn the bill over to the U.S. taxpayer who has no say in
the transaction. Under such a system what incentive would a kid
have to live at home and go to a community college? Why not attend
the most expensive university that taxpayer money will allow? I
suppose Obama was so impressed with how this dynamic works with
health care that he decided education could use some of the same
medicine.
October
27, 2011
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
Copyright
© 2011 Euro Pacific Capital
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