Debt Forgiveness

I was sorry to see that a recent Rasmussen poll which reported that 2/3’s of Americans oppose full forgiveness for student loans (“66% Oppose Forgiveness of Student Loans“). That contrasts sharply with Obama’s announcement limiting loan repayment to around 10% of income for 20 years before forgiveness (President to Ease Student Loan Burden for Low-Income Graduates“).

Or maybe the contrast only suggests Obama’s tedious sense of caution… Either way, I think we need to do a lot more work in putting student debt into the context of the ongoing destruction of both class mobility in general and the middle class standard of living in particular.  It’s part of the same conservative economic world that brought us the housing crash, the European debt crisis, and the seemingly unending recession.

The Reagan ideology said that the market could do no wrong and wildly privatized and deregulated anything and everything. The result was inevitably the same: a radical concentration of power and resources into the hands of a tiny majority. The ruling class succeed beyond its wildest dreams. The problem, of course, is that they are killing the goose that laid this golden egg. It’s time to start to de-concentrate power and resources.

Transparency and Hypocrisy

It seems pretty obvious that posting professor salaries online, as Florida Governor Scott has done (“Posting of profs’ salaries online draws scrutiny“) is an act of aggression against what he no doubt sees as his natural enemies in the academy. It’s part of a long-term campaign to disparage public employees, and, no doubt further weaken academic freedom of speech and tenure.

The governor fails to mention, of course, that the majority of teachers are either adjuncts or part-time. The salaries don’t seem particularly exorbitant, either, and are below the national average. As the article notes, too, the information is inaccurate in some cases, because the highest paid professors are not professors, they are administrators, like Neil Fenske, who’s paid more than a million a year.

A Win for the Tortoise

The ongoing race between the for profit universities– the nimble but greedy rabbits– and the public universities–slow but steady democratic tortoises– crossed a landmark when  St. Leo’s University moved its online education system back in-house, dropping its long-standing outsourcing arrangement with Brisk Education (“We’ll Take It From Here“). We can hope that  privatization is slowing down.

As the article notes, many of the outsourcing contracts were long-term and relatively few have come up for renewal until recently. I think that as they do the public university system is going to be increasingly willing to follow St. Leo and other schools as they realize that what once seemed too alien and new now seems commonplace.  Outsourcing is about politics not expertise; public money needs to stay in the public system.