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Eakinomics: Is Free
College a Good Idea?
Yesterday, Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Pramila Jayapal introduced a bill to make college
free for students from families earning less than $125,000. Specifically,
“The bill would make community college
tuition-free for everyone and four-year public colleges tuition-free and
debt-free for students from families making up to $125,000 per year.” Also,
“The bill would also allow students from families who make up to $125,000 per
year to attend private, nonprofit minority-serving institutions tuition-free
such as historically Black colleges and universities.”
Is this a good idea? Nope.
First, do we really want to subsidize lifetime students? It might sound
ludicrous for someone to keep going year after year, but one thing that
tuition does is give students an incentive to get their education as quickly
as possible and move on. Having anything provided free invites overuse and
abuse.
Second, the argument is that college is the 21st century
version of high school. “‘In the 21st century, a free public education system
that goes from kindergarten through high school is no longer good enough. The
time is long overdue to make public colleges and universities tuition-free
and debt-free for working families,’ Sanders said in a statement.” This is
just not correct. College is not a broad-based, generally applicable set of
knowledge. It has specialized areas and professional training that
specifically benefit the student in the form of higher lifetime earnings.
They have every incentive to pay for that higher return, and it is
inappropriate to stick the taxpayer with the bill.
Third, these institutions are not the only ones providing college education.
The free-tuition proposal would tilt the playing field against private
colleges, for-profit specialized training schools, vocational training,
on-line colleges, and innovative, entrepreneurial new entrants not yet in
existence. Ossifying the competitive dynamics in such a dysfunctional sector
is a policy error.
Fourth, these institutions have no particular merit. Indeed, they are
currently doing a terrible job. In 2019, only 40.8 percent of students
entering public 2-year colleges graduate in 6 years – the worst track record
of any type of college. For public 4-year colleges, it was merely 66.7
percent. If the taxpayer is going to pay for their book of business, it
should only be in exchange for fundamental reforms that improve performance.
Finally, this is a weird subsidy. Right now, low-income Americans can already
go for free on Pell grants. As a result, the free-college proposal is really
a subsidy to the middle class, right up to $125,000 per year. Why do
something that is so regressive?
“Free” is the soundtrack of the
progressive policy movement. But as alluring as “free” can sound, the reality
is a lot less appealing.
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