It's
Time To Give College Graduates A Future With Real Freedom
By LeeAnn Hall
By LeeAnn Hall
The
U.S. Senate held a vote recently to bring up legislation allowing student debt
holders to refinance old loans at lower current interest rates.
The motion to
debate the "Bank on Students Emergency Loan Refinancing Act" (S.
2432) garnered a 56-38 majority but fell short of the 60 votes needed to open
debate.
Republicans
cast 37 of the 38 "no" votes. Only three Republicans joined 53
Democrats and Independents in voting to debate the bill.
For
members of the college and high school classes of 2014, and for past graduates,
this effort to tackle the student debt issue is sorely needed. For whether
their degrees are in math, science, history or English, our graduates are
coming out of college schooled in something else entirely: the crushing weight
of student loan debt.
With
outstanding student debt now topping $1.2 trillion, 40 million Americans are
facing the consequences of our failing national commitment to higher education.
This situation poses a threat to America's economic vitality and its promise of
opportunity.
And
student loans have turned into a big business for the U.S. Department of
Education, which reportedly made a profit of $41.3 billion from federal student
loans last year. If the agency were a corporation, it would be one of the most
profitable in the world.
It's
time to address the student debt crisis and the toll it's taking on the
economy. Allowing refinancing will save borrowers thousands of dollars in
interest payments. That will free up disposable income, boost consumer
spending, and strengthen the economy.
However,
to fix the overall student debt picture, we need to think even bigger -- big
enough to put "free college" back on the national agenda. Does free
college sounds like magical thinking? It's more like a walk down memory lane.
Fifty
years ago in California, tuition-free college wasn't pie in the sky, it was
state policy. In 1964, a world-class education in the public University of
California system came with free tuition and fees totaling just $220 for the
year.
At
the 1964 minimum wage of $1.25 an hour, you could earn $220 in four and a half
weeks of full-time work. That means a University of California student 50 years
ago could earn enough to pay for a year's college costs by flipping burgers for
a month in the summer.
Today,
even at in-state rates, with tuition and fees averaging $8,893 for the
2013-2014 school year, it would take seven months of full-time work at the
$7.25 federal minimum wage to make that much.
What's
changed since 1964? A massive public disinvestment from higher education has
shifted the costs of college onto students and families. Just in the past few
years, state funding per student was cut by an average of 27 percent
nationwide.
Private
interests have filled the void, transforming college finance into a vehicle for
financial industry profits. Private lenders have moved aggressively into the
student loan market, offering loans with interest rates in the double digits.
The explosion of student loan debt has also fueled a burgeoning student loan
debt collection industry.
Translation:
Wall Street has turned our college students into a new cash cow.
It
doesn't have to be this way. If we're serious about giving our children and
grandchildren real freedom -- freedom from student debt -- we need to reverse
the trend of public disinvestment, put a stop to private profiteering, and
recommit to free college in America. Then we need to marshal the resources to
make it happen. Ending offshore tax giveaways to multinational corporations and
millionaires would be one way to get there.
Is
solving the student debt crisis going to take a fight, given the political
clout of the financial interests that are making big money off the status quo?
Of course. But it's a fight worth having.
Let's
make college in America what it should be: a free, shared vehicle for building
an educated people, not another costly way for special interests to take us for
a ride.
Hall is executive director of the Alliance for a
Just Society, a national research, policy, and organizing network that advances
state and national campaigns for economic and social equity.