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Education United States

Some Americans Have Fled The Country To Escape Student Loan Debt (cnbc.com) 747

"Some student loan borrowers are packing their bags and fleeing from the U.S. to other countries, where the cost of living is often lower and debt collectors wield less power over them," reports CNBC: Chad Haag considered living in a cave to escape his student debt. He had a friend doing it. But after some plotting, he settled on what he considered a less risky plan. This year, he relocated to a jungle in India. "I've put America behind me," Haag, 29, said. Today he lives in a concrete house in the village of Uchakkada for $50 a month. His backyard is filled with coconut trees and chickens. "I saw four elephants just yesterday," he said, adding that he hopes never to set foot in a Walmart again. More than 9,000 miles away from Colorado, Haag said, his student loans don't feel real anymore. "It's kind of like, if a tree falls in the woods and no one hears it, does it really exist?" he said...

Although there is no national data on how many people have left the United States because of student debt, borrowers tell their stories of doing so in Facebook groups and Reddit channels and how-to advice is offered on personal finance websites. "It may be an issue we see an uptick in if the trends keep up," said Barmak Nassirian, director of federal relations at the American Association of State Colleges and Universities.... Struggling borrowers should enter into one of the government's income-based repayment plans instead, in which their monthly bill will be capped at a portion of their income, he said. Some payments wind up being as little as $0 a month.

But the fact that people are taking this drastic measure should bring scrutiny to the larger student loan system, said Alan Collinge, founder of Student Loan Justice. "Any rational person who learns that people are fleeing the country as a result of their student loan debt will conclude that something has gone horribly awry with this lending system," Collinge said.

Haag tells CNBC that because of his student loan debt, "I have a higher standard of living in a Third World country than I would in America." The average student now has around $30,000 in debt when they graduate, according to the article (which is nearly double the inflation-adjusted average of $16,000 in the early 1990s) -- while inflation-adjusted salaries "have remained almost flat over the last few decades."

One 39-year-old even tells CNBC, "I feel that college ruined my life." (He's been living overseas since 2011 -- first in China, then Ukraine -- and hasn't checked his student loan account in nearly eight years.) Another graduate teaching English in Japan told CNBC that they wanted to return to the U.S. -- but their student debt is now over $100,000.

"The Education Department did not respond to a request for comment.
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Some Americans Have Fled The Country To Escape Student Loan Debt

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  • "Chad Haag considered living in a cave to escape his student debt. He had a friend doing it."
     
    Millenials make no sense.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      They conveniently don't mention what these fools majored in. Apparently Haag even went back for a Masters in Comparative Literature. Who goes $30k in debt for worthless degrees?

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Trimaz ( 4609805 )
        Comparative Literature? A degree in Gender Studies would have a higher return.
      • Why so harsh? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by yooy ( 1146753 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @11:33PM (#58660384) Homepage
        You could pay off USD 30k with teaching English in China. Please keep in mind that both guys mention that the last recession hit them. I got a PhD (STEM field) and it proved worthless for me, also maybe connected with the last recession. I left with nothing, went to another country basically "to die", stabilized there and things have been going good since. I never looked back. Offer me a 160k job in the states? Thanks, I pass. Difference between me and these guys: I don't have students loans.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          You could pay off USD 30k with teaching English in China.

          You don't need a degree for that.

          If the degree itself doesn't contribute to your earning potential, then you should not go into debt to get it.

          • You don't need the degree to teach English, you need the degree to get the job.

        • Re:Why so harsh? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki@gmail.cBALDWINom minus author> on Monday May 27, 2019 @12:05AM (#58660496) Homepage

          You could clear $30k USD by being a terminal truck driver in around 17 weeks with OT. Go long haul and O/O to another company hauling say jet engines or parts for port terminals? Or hauling dangerous goods? All pay very well. There's a whole pile of dirty jobs out there that can make you good to excellent money. The problem is there's a whole generation of people that look to go around a problem instead of dealing with it.

          That guy, the one who ran off to live in a cave? He'd have been better becoming a park ranger, working for fish and wildlife, or something along those lines. It's weeks of bust your ass followed by months of tedium.

          • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @02:00AM (#58660800) Homepage

            Yes but people like that want to earn 100K/annum by sitting behing large Apple-branded monitors while reducing the color contrast on web sites.

          • Most middle-class kids are not aware of dirty jobs. The problem is that a lot of those 'middle-class' kids are not middle-class.
            • by kick6 ( 1081615 )

              Most middle-class kids are not aware of dirty jobs.

              Middle class kids have never seen a semi truck? Middle class kids have never seen a plumber come to their house? An electrician? They're fully aware of dirty jobs...they've just been told those jobs are "beneath them."

        • Re:Why so harsh? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @03:52AM (#58661150) Journal

          Why so harsh?

          Well, by shitting on people who were lied to extensively as kids and then made the obvious bad decision as young adults, the GP can feel better about himself. It's much easier crapping on others than doing something actually worthwhile yourself.

          • Re:Why so harsh? (Score:4, Interesting)

            by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @09:06AM (#58662026)

            Why so harsh?

            Well, by shitting on people who were lied to extensively as kids and then made the obvious bad decision as young adults, the GP can feel better about himself. It's much easier crapping on others than doing something actually worthwhile yourself.

            A person sometimes finds themselves in a place, not of their own making, that is not all that good. Many modern young people were part of a perfect storm of mis-placed kindness Raised by parents who attempted to protect them from any and all adversity or pain, taught by teachers that they were the center of the universe in order to inculcate them with self esteem (but not the accomplishments that should be the base of it) then shuffled off to college after being told that you can be anything you want if you find your passion and go for it. And no cost is too high.

            So we have a generation+ that is pretty messed up. Their through the roof high self esteem took a terrible beating once they got into the real world, they were woefully unprepared for life's problems because of being sheltered from any of them, and now many are in debt with worthless degrees.

            So yeah, A person sometimes finds themselves in a place, not of their own making, that is not all that good.

            There are choices the poor person who finds themselves in such a place has to make. Gonna suck it up and work with what you have? Or are you going to complain, give up and declare yourself defeated?

            This will probably get downvoted to hell and back, even though it is probably the only useable advice on the problem.

      • Re:What? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @02:00AM (#58660798) Homepage

        I've been pointing this out to every young person that is going into college.

        "Get a damn degree in something that pays the bills first."

        Then if you want to get a degree in basket weaving go back after you have something you can pay the bills with. My first degree was in Electrical Engineering and I hated every moment of it, but it payed well and financed my second time through college where I got my masters in CS.

        Something a lot of people don't understand is you don't need a fucking degree in everything you want to take. You don't even need to get credits in. Most Universities will offer something called adult studies or something like that. It is where you pay a greatly reduced fee and just sit in the class. You don't get tested of course or credits for the class but if it just a class you are interested in its a good option. Over the years I have taken, well sat in, classes for philosophy, physics, history, and political science.

        • I've been pointing this out to every young person that is going into college.

          Have you actually though? what does this entail? Ranting on the internet or, say, doing outreach at schools?

          If it's not the latter then why are you complaining?

          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            No body is complaining about anything. I'm not sure how you got anything out of that.

    • "Chad Haag considered living in a cave to escape his student debt. He had a friend doing it."

      Millenials make no sense.

      I think you meant to say Millenials make very few cents.

  • by currently_awake ( 1248758 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @10:40PM (#58660160)
    A large multi-national corporation can erase its pension liability by declaring bankrupcy, but a common person can't get out of paying a student debt. Why do we let corporations have MORE rights than a person?
    • by slashdice ( 3722985 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @10:57PM (#58660252)
      Funny thing about that. Used to be, student loans were discharged through bankruptcy. Then some enterprising folks racked up huge grad school loans and declared bankruptcy. Doctors, Lawyers, MBA types.
    • and we don't spill the blood of kings.
    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      Because most of the student loan debt in the US isn't held by corporations. All of the student loans in the US since 2009ish have been done by the federal government - that's who owns the debt. That also makes them the largest debt holders of those loans, banks and lenders washed their hands of the entire thing. And when the government took over the loan business, tuition rates went right through the roof.

    • A large multi-national corporation, as a rule, can't borrow money without any collateral. If student debt could be erased nobody would be willing to issue the loans. Which, IMO, would be an improvement over the status quo.

    • by blahplusplus ( 757119 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @12:59AM (#58660630)

      A large multi-national corporation can erase its pension liability by declaring bankrupcy, but a common person can't get out of paying a student debt. Why do we let corporations have MORE rights than a person?

      Because you've been miseducated about who government works for and how your society works.

      Former national security advisor of the United states on the thread of the global political awakening of the masses:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      Princeton study - Does the public have any say over their government or is it just the rich and corporations?

      https://scholar.princeton.edu/... [princeton.edu]

      Here are billions of dollars in energy subsidies, aka when politicians are saying social services need to be cut, they are speaking out both sides of their mouths because they know most people don't look at what companies are getting free handouts from subsidies.

      https://www.imf.org/external/p... [imf.org]

      Protectionism for the rich and big business by state intervention, radical market interference.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      Our brains are much worse at reality and thinking than thought. Science on reasoning:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      Crisis of democracy

      https://youtu.be/glHd_5-9PVs?t... [youtu.be]

      Manufacturing consent:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] https://vimeo.com/39566117 [vimeo.com]

      US distribution of wealth

      https://imgur.com/a/FShfb [imgur.com] http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesa... [ucsc.edu]

      The Centre for Investigative Journalism

      http://www.tcij.org/ [tcij.org]

      Some history on US imperialism by us corporations.

      https://kurukshetra1.wordpress... [wordpress.com]

    • Autralian System (Score:5, Interesting)

      by labnet ( 457441 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @02:16AM (#58660846)

      Why not adopt the Australian System.
      The government loans you the money, but you only have to pay it back once you start earning a decent income. The loan is interest free and only indexed to inflation.

      • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @03:49AM (#58661144)
        Because what cropped up in response to easy education loans were scam colleges. They'd promise you a degree in exchange for a tuition and a couple years of night courses. But the education turned out to be substandard, and there's no such thing as a money-back guarantee for college. So these scam colleges got the money, while students (who weren't much better off after completing their "college education") were stuck with the bill. If you decrease the risk to the student for taking out a loan for college, they will be more likely to use the money on riskier colleges which turn out to be scams.

        What needs to happen is for the spigot to be tightened or turned off. Student loans needs to become harder to get. We're trying to subsidize education from the demand side (ability of students to pay for college) when clearly most of them are not capable of making sound financial decisions about the value of college. We should switch to subsidizing education from the supply side - build more state colleges and universities, expand the existing ones. Use money that used to go into government loans and scholarships, into discounting the tuition at these government-funded colleges. The increased competition in post-HS education combined with turning off the loan spigot will force tutions at private colleges to decrease. The reason we do this is because the right doesn't like the idea of subsidizing public colleges which are in competition with private colleges. And the left doesn't like the idea of a bright poor student's only choice being to go to a public university, when a loan program will let them go to Harvard. (Incidentally, Harvard has a big enough endowment [wikipedia.org] that technically it doesn't even need to charge tuition. $37 billion * 2.5% growth/yr = $925 million/yr. $925 million / 22,000 students = $42,000 per student.)
        • Bullshit. I am Australian, live in Australia, and received an education thanks to HECS which is the interest-free government loan that every Australian can get. You only pay it back when you earn more than 50k, and it's all automatic off your tax.

          While you are a student, you also receive around $12000/year for living expenses. Everybody gets it as long as they are studying, no questions asked.

          The way it is here, and the way it should be.

          This bullshit about scam college is idiotic.

          • While you are a student, you also receive around $12000/year for living expenses. Everybody gets it as long as they are studying, no questions asked.

            That's a bit of an exaggeration. IF you can prove eligibility, you MAY qualify for youth allowance or Austudy to help with living expenses.

            HECS is great though. It's a shame the govt keeps trying to break it by reducing the repayment threshold. And yes, some universities are definitely inflating the price of degrees to match.

            We could also look more closely at the loopholes for foreign students (who pay full fees and often have entry requirements waived, as long as their cheque clears)

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          In the UK Universities are audited to make sure that the courses they offer a of a good standard, before anyone can get loans to attend them.

          That would solve the scam college problem and still allow people to get a decent education.

      • Why not adopt the Australian System.

        Does it involve massive, free profits for private companies?

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @03:27AM (#58661068)
      Not that I disagree, but it's not as one-sided as you're portraying it. A company declaring bankruptcy loses control in exchange for shedding its liabilities. In that respect, it's not so much erasing is pension liabilities as it is telling the pensioners, "Look, if we keep this up the company is going to cease existing and your pension will be zero. We need to figure out a way to keep the company afloat so it can keep paying you a pension, even if it's at a lower amount than you were expecting." A pension would only be completely erased if the company's situation is so dire that other creditors are higher priority than the pensioners, and there's nothing left after those creditors are paid off.

      As the other reply mentioned, student loans used to be dischargeable in bankruptcy. The banks didn't care because they were usually guaranteed by the government. If the student failed to pay back the loan, the government would. When the government decided it would no longer guarantee the loans, the banks predictably said "welp, we'll have to stop making loans to students then unless they can pass a strict credit check." And the problem with loans has always been that the people who need them the most (the poor with no or poor credit history) have been unable to qualify for them. So in order to keep the loan money flowing from banks, Congress made it so you couldn't discharge student loans in a bankruptcy. (There are still ways you can do it [forbes.com], it's just a lot harder.)

      It's a little counter-intuitive, but making it harder to get student loans is actually what needs to happen to reign in skyrocketing college tuitions. Loans are just time-shifting money from your future earnings to pay for things in the present. Unfortunately, making good financial decisions depends on having good information. And since nobody can predict the future, it's difficult for students to make accurate estimates of their future earnings. Decades of experience has shown that their estimates for how much they'll make after graduating tend to be too rosy, causing them to willingly pay the higher college tuitions rather than telling the college to get lost. The colleges have been exploiting this to push up tuitions as quickly as they can, far faster than the rate of inflation [inflationdata.com]. Make it harder to get student loans and schools can't raise tutions as quickly.

      Instead, we should be putting the money into government-funded state colleges. Normally when demand for a product (college) goes up, additional supply is created, and the balance between the two keeps prices the same. But people want to go to the big-name colleges and universities, and that supply constraint impedes this natural price-leveling process. If you instead subsidize the supply by adding more government-funded colleges, the forced increased competition will drop the price of tuition Right now, most of the additional revenue from higher tuitions has gone into hiring non-teaching administrators [reason.com]. So colleges can easily cut those jobs in response to lower tuitions, without affecting the quality of education. (The same problem is what afflicts our healthcare system [twimg.com] - we've made the rules so complex and given the bean counters so much control over healthcare, that the cost of them deciding whether a medical procedure should be allowed or denied exceeds the cost of the procedure itself.)
      • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @10:57AM (#58662496) Journal

        Not that I disagree, but it's not as one-sided as you're portraying it. A company declaring bankruptcy loses control in exchange for shedding its liabilities. In that respect, it's not so much erasing is pension liabilities as it is telling the pensioners, "Look, if we keep this up the company is going to cease existing and your pension will be zero.

        It's not like that though, not in many cases.

        In a bankruptcy there's an order in which payments are made and creditors take precedence over pensioners. This means that companies can essentially spend the pension fund by securing the loan on the pension stash. While they're busy "growing", they're paying immense executive salaries and hefty dividends to board members. then the chickens come home to roost and the creditors get paid out of the pension fund and the pensioners get screwed.

        So yes you're right that's the intended purpose of the restructuring laws and they do get used to keep a company afloat which would simply have tanked putting a bunch of pensioners out of money and a bunch of people out of work. However like most reasonable things, it gets massively abused.

  • The taxpayers are now on the hook for this massive subsidy to Universities
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 26, 2019 @10:48PM (#58660196)

    * 13 years of explicit government education results in students who cannot understand the math behind their loan; they should be able to see immediately that it's a bad idea based on just the math!

    * Governments push higher learning on unqualified people, rather than letting them get on with their lives in a marketable trade, where they will actually be happy and productive.

    * Government subsidizes loans, and then forbids declaring bankruptcy on them. This is utterly anti-Capitalism, and explains why the price of education has become divorced from reality.

    As always, the solution is Capitalism: The entity making the loan must take the risk that the student will default. This will force people back to reality; it will drive students towards productive work that society actually needs—corporations should be sponsoring education (e.g., making the loans) for the workers that they explicitly need, and then offer those students internships and jobs as part of the learning process. They used to call this an apprenticeship.

    • * Government subsidizes loans, and then forbids declaring bankruptcy on them. This is utterly anti-Capitalism, and explains why the price of education has become divorced from reality. yep if there was risk on these loans they would not hand them out to people who cannot pay them. bringing down the amount of useless grads and forcing people to stop requiring a masters to flip a burger.
    • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @01:45PM (#58663272)

      * 13 years of explicit government education results in students who cannot understand the math behind their loan; they should be able to see immediately that it's a bad idea based on just the math!

      And you should bother doing the math on their alternative. It's either get a student loan or work retail-level jobs forever.

      Employers are demanding degrees even when they are not necessary, because they can and still fill their jobs. Apprenticeships have long waiting lists. Trade schools aren't free either.

      We've created a system to fuck over students so that banks, school administrators and bondholders can make a shitload of money. You're blaming the students for that....the people who literally had no say in how this system was built.

      As always, the solution is Capitalism: The entity making the loan must take the risk that the student will default

      And as always, the free marketeers are utterly ignorant of history.

      'Cause we had your system for decades. It meant that the bottom 30-40% of the income distribution could never afford college. Because they were too big of a credit risk. It also meant middle-income kids were paying credit-card-like interest rates on their loans.

      When we've constructed a system where college is required for roughly 80% of the population, and then made only 20% be able to afford it, with the following 40% paying usurious rates, it's not a good thing.

      The pseudo-free-market solution we went with to avoid "spending tax dollars" while actually spending tax dollars is shitty....but it's still better than what came before unless you think you can convince employers to lower standards.

  • by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @11:06PM (#58660286) Homepage

    Step 1: Borrow $100,000 in your wealthy home country
    Step 2: Move to a developing country where your expenses are low
    Step 3: Profit by living off your loan for the rest of your life without ever repaying it

    The more ethical version of this is retired people taking their fixed income to countries where the income goes a lot further. That, of course, has been going on for a long time. A loan that can't be enforced across borders allows people to skip the whole 40 years of working step and just start their retirement young.

    Using a student loan is just a miscalculation that leads to a somewhat less optimal situation. You still flee the debt, but may not have much seed money, so may need to have a part time online job or something.

    • Just make sure you never, ever travel to a country which extradites back to your home country, as fraud is a crime regardless of whether the loan itself can or cannot be enforced across borders - it still exists, and the intention to enter into it without repayment is slam dunk fraud.

  • Stupid (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @11:07PM (#58660296) Journal

    The only thing they prevent is the ability for the Fed to garnish their wages. They also prevent participation in receiving anything but the possibility of a receiving the minimum social security payment and medicare. Not to mention 401k or health plans while working.

      Whereas, I can agree any intelligent person can have a significantly better lifestyle in a third world country (in some live like a rockstar), the time to do that is AFTER you've secured sufficient resources and retired. What happens when you have a significant health emergency?

      They agreed, participated and benefited from a contract. That, by inference included that they participate in "the game" or "rat race".

      I understand the feeling of burden, my debt was significantly less than today's graduate. I was in such a panic that I joined the military and satisfied the debt. I hindsight it was stupid, considering the fraction of debt I had then, compared to today. I traded two years of my life being controlled by people not qualified to flip hamburgers and paid the debt.

      I'll be spending my retirement on some beach in South America where my "participation in the game" will grant me 8X the avg local salary monthly without touching the reserve. I'll be worrying about assuring there's sufficient reserves of cold beer, nothing else.

    • I'll be spending my retirement on some beach in South America where my "participation in the game" will grant me 8X the avg local salary monthly without touching the reserve. I'll be worrying about assuring there's sufficient reserves of cold beer, nothing else.

      Well, at least until the bandits raid your expatriate retirement community...

      https://www.thedailybeast.com/... [thedailybeast.com]

    • and you have a significant health emergency then you die. [facebook.com]

      This isn't a "feeling" anymore. The people in the article hit the job market during the worst of the great recession. That's permanently wrecked their careers. They now have a history of bad jobs. It makes them look, on paper, like damaged goods. And with the hyper competitive job market they will probably never recover baring a major shift in our politics and economy.

      Most of them were living with parents. That's a pretty heavy burden for nor
    • I understand the feeling of burden, my debt was significantly less than today's graduate.

      Yet you blame the victim rather than blaming the system. If workers want more than burger flipper wages, they are sneered at that they need to make themselves more valuable as employees if they want to make more money, Then, if they take student loans to get an education to make more money - but are stuck with student loans they can never pay back - they are sneered at a second time for borrowing money they couldn't kno

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday May 26, 2019 @11:12PM (#58660320)
    they all graduated when the recession was in full swing. If you start your career like that you become damaged goods. Everyone looks at your work history and wonders what's wrong with you. And in the hyper competitive job market they've got plenty of other candidates to choose from. So they just move on, and that's _if_ they bother looking at your resume. A lot of the time a computer just parses your resume and throws it out before that.
  • by wickedsteve ( 729684 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @12:22AM (#58660552) Homepage
    Struggling borrowers should enter into one of the government's income-based repayment plans instead, in which their monthly bill will be capped at a portion of their income, he said. Some payments wind up being as little as $0 a month. This is exactly my situation. They know I have no income so they ask for no payment. Why don't more people do this?
  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @12:34AM (#58660570) Journal
    Whatever happened to working whilst in university? Yeah, it puts a major crimp on your social life, but you can graduate without a bunch of debt. It wasn't easy doing 18 credits a quarter and working 25+ hour weeks, but after 4 years I graduated with a BSEE and zero debt.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      This is what I did for my second time through school. I held down a 40 hour a week job and attended school at night. I didn't have much of a social life but I came out of it with $5,000 in student debit. Which I paid off in a year.

  • by myid ( 3783581 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @01:02AM (#58660640)

    People talk about student loans, but not so much about the main problem: the rising cost of college. To lower the cost of college, we need to know where the money currently goes, and what the trend is (where the money went 10 years ago vs. where it goes today).

    Betsy DeVos should hire a CPA, a lawyer who specializes in finance, and someone who is familiar with college spending. This last person would know where money really goes, not where it's supposed to go. He/she would say, "If you want to know where a college's money goes, ask the following questions."

    Then the CPA, lawyer, and college spending expert get together, and write 20 or 30 questions, to find out where college money goes. It's the same set of questions for each college. How many dollars? How many full-time students?, etc. (Let the CPA and lawyer figure out how to handle differences, such as quarter vs. semester-based colleges.)

    DeVos provides a list of all colleges and universities that get money from the US government (directly through grants, or indirectly through student loans).

    Then researchers find out the answers to each of the questions, for each of these colleges, for each of the last 25 years.

    Then the researchers send their collected data to the colleges, confirming that the numbers are right. If a college says the numbers are wrong, then it has to give some kind of evidence to prove that the college's numbers, not the researchers' numbers, are correct.

    If a college wants to make a statement like "We plan to be more frugal in the future", fine. But I still want to see those numbers.

    Once the numbers are collected, they are posted on the internet for everyone to see. If a college is spending more on sports than on academics, or is spending more on retirement than on current teachers, then congress and individual donors might want to re-consider their contributions.

    Besides individual colleges, also find out where the money goes in each state-wide university system. For example, here's a gem regarding the University of California [wikipedia.org] system:

    Besides substantial six-figure incomes, the UC President and all UC chancellors enjoy controversial perks such as free housing in the form of university-maintained mansions.[58] In 1962, Anson Blake's will donated his 10-acre (40,000 m2) estate (Blake Garden) and mansion (Blake House) in Kensington to the University of California's Department of Landscape Architecture. In 1968, the Regents decided to make Blake House the official residence of the UC President. As of 2005, it cost around $300,000 per year to maintain Blake Garden and Blake House; the latter, built in 1926, is a 13,239-square-foot (1,229.9 m2) mansion with a view of San Francisco Bay.[58]

    All UC chancellors traditionally live for free in a mansion on or near campus that is usually known as University House, where they host social functions attended by guests and donors.[59] UC San Diego's University House was closed from 2004 to 2014 for $10.5 million in renovations paid for by private donors, which were so expensive because the 12,000-square-foot structure sits on top of a sacred Native American cemetery and next to an unstable coastal bluff.[60][61]

    Collect the numbers for the state-wide bureaucracies, for each of the last 25 years, and put those numbers on the internet, besides the numbers for individual colleges.

  • by ikhider ( 2837593 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @01:18AM (#58660700)
    It is interesting that there is a bottomless account for weapons and disastrous foreign wars and mega corps to offshore 'profits', but when it comes to superfluous things like education, medical care and infrastructure, the country is all tapped out. There are now generations of indentured slaves that were not there a few decades ago. Tuitions are priced out of the stratosphere and even a decent paying job may not be able to meet the debt load. Medical/education/infrastructure expenses are a fraction of what is spent on weapons and war, but priorities are such that the populace is of little concern when compared to dreaming war.
  • Rubbish (Score:3, Interesting)

    by heson ( 915298 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @03:45AM (#58661128) Journal
    Graduate A: 30k debt is impossible to pay off.
    Also Graduate A: Buys a car for 40k and a house for 600k.

    Also if you drink daily Starbucks milkshakes or have a $900 phone, you have forfeited your rights to complain.
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @03:51AM (#58661148)

    There's no (or very low, in the hundreds) student fees. What that means is that everyone and their dog tries to get an advanced degree. Universities are flooded with students. At least in the beginning, until people noticed that it's dog-eat-dog. That's also where the socialism ends. You're on your own. Nobody holding your hand. It's too hard? You can't organize yourself? Suck it up or get out of the way, there's at least 10 others wanting your slot in the lab.

    It's also no problem for profs to put the screws on and test with the explicit goal of elimination. They don't get more money if they have more students. All they get is more work that distracts from what they perceive as their actual job: Research. You think they want you there? They want you out. What they want is someone who can aid them in their research, and for that they just need those that are good enough for that. The rest can, as far as they're concerned, crawl into a hole and die.

    Can't find the lecture? Sucks to be you. Can't figure out how to solve the task? You probably don't belong here. Sucking up doesn't work, bribery doesn't work. The only thing that does work is being good. Really, really good. Because nobody gives half a shit about whether you graduate or drop out after the first semester.

    To be honest, this feels a lot more "capitalist" than the US model. In capitalism, the best products prevail while the inferior ones perish. Or did I get something wrong here?

  • Win-Win (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dohzer ( 867770 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @04:36AM (#58661268)

    And they've also fled the US, so it's win-win for them.

  • by pz ( 113803 ) on Monday May 27, 2019 @05:09AM (#58661332) Journal

    When I got out of school in the very late 1990s, I had a fair bit of student debt at a reasonable interest rate. Being, you know, educated, I realized pretty quickly that the minimum payment plans that seem to always get the press were highly unattractive because they only just covered the interest and barely made a dent in the principle. That's just a stupid, stupid way of repaying debt because it means you'll be carrying it forever. Far better to forego a daily $4 coffee (yes, you can make coffee yourself and bring it along in a thermos; I did for a few years to save about $100/month that went to debt repayment), and a $10 lunch (bring your own again, saving about $8 per day). I got just basic cable and phone service. I shared an apartment. I went out socially only night per week. In other words, since I was in debt, I minimized my expenses so I could get out of debt as quickly as possible. Using a 20 or 30 year repayment plan means, guess what?, you are in debt for 20 or 30 years. That's inadvisable for student-loan levels of debt that are easy to pay off quickly if you're making a decent, college-graduate wage.

    The massive bonus was that once my student loan was paid off, my credit score went up. Be smart: don't take the minimum payment plan, and get yourself out of debt quickly.

    • I graduated from college at about the same time. During and after college, I lived with my parents (which saved a HUGE amount of money), spent my after-tuition student loans on my phone bill and a hamburger at school every day, and graduated with about $18,500 in student debt (thank you, Pell grant).

      Back then, repayment was on a 10-year schedule. After I got my degree, I paid back as much as I could every month, until I paid it all off 7 years later. Of course, I majored in something with earning potenti

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