American education cost has also skyrocketed since the Reagan presidency. Notice again right around 1980 college cost started to rise faster than inflation.
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Oh, I have a chart about education I'd like to post. Charts are fun.
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American education cost has also skyrocketed since the Reagan presidency. Notice again right around 1980 college cost started to rise faster than inflation.
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The only political opinion I have is this: people with real life experience (fighting in wars, etc.) have words that carry more weight than some kid who read a book in college. Just my 0.02.
So, what did Reagan do to cause this, since that is what your posts hints at?
This thread is too much for me. I am the most uninformed American there is when it comes to this stuff. Have NEVER voted in a presidential election (never had jury duty though because of it), and NEVER watch the news, read newspapers, etc. Every time I try to get involved, my head starts to spin.
The only political opinion I have is this: people with real life experience (fighting in wars, etc.) have words that carry more weight than some kid who read a book in college. Just my 0.02.
*Damn you offseason for making this the only active thread!
Oh please.
Just my opinion. That wasn't directed towards you. It irks me when an older working class guy states how he feels about something and some hotshot tells him a hundred different ways why he's "wrong."
I have a married in family member (jerkoff, know it all, never had a job until after college) who does this every year during the holidays, and it drives everyone nuts. I just stay out of it and get really drunk since I have no idea what he's talking about.
I think this is pretty much the same debate we have all been having on this thread.
At about 4:40-5:20 the caller presents a scenario of who to give 50 grand too a homeless guy or a billonaire. For the country to get its best return economical who would you give it to? That is pretty much what this great debate is about.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/670iZS9bn8I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
By the way PL 22 I'll work on getting some for gas prices. I am not exactly sure of all the factors for gas prices. I am sure a great deal is the basic supply and demand concept. I know we are actually doing well with domestic oil production and in getting better fuel economy out of our cars. So I am interested to see what other factors are involved and if policy would in fact make a difference.
So Mississippi finally ratified the 13th amendment to end slavery today. Apparently they never submitted the federal government lol.
I think this is pretty much the same debate we have all been having on this thread.
At about 4:40-5:20 the caller presents a scenario of who to give 50 grand too a homeless guy or a billonaire. For the country to get its best return economical who would you give it to? That is pretty much what this great debate is about.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/670iZS9bn8I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
By the way PL 22 I'll work on getting some for gas prices. I am not exactly sure of all the factors for gas prices. I am sure a great deal is the basic supply and demand concept. I know we are actually doing well with domestic oil production and in getting better fuel economy out of our cars. So I am interested to see what other factors are involved and if policy would in fact make a difference.
One thing about the price in 2008/2009 is that demand was down due to the financial crisis. Less people working means less people driving. Less demand at stores means less delivery trucks. So in a way anything that may have been done to help the economy may have hurt gasoline prices.
I am a dreamer, but both parties should embrace this. We can't solve this with taxes only and spending reductions only. We have dug ourselves way too deep. I doubt either side will embrace this tho in a serious manner. Each side will point to how the other side isn't realistic. Damn shame.
Report: New Alan Simpson-Erskine Bowles plan - Kevin Robillard - POLITICO.com
agreed, but I don't understand why there is no military spending in the plan. it is unwise to cut the way the sequester will force us to cut, but there is definately room to cut the military over time.
So, what did Reagan do to cause this, since that is what your posts hints at?
We're waiting chicago...
Wow I guess I'm popular.
Ronald Reagan's Educational Legacy
As president he cut education funding in half.
He often spoke out against colleges saying the were basically the breeding grounds for communism idea (not this had anything to with tuition).
As governor he eliminated free public college in California. UC and other Cal schools were free prior to Reagan. Reagan being a popular figure led other states to do this.
People forget we used to have free college throughout the United States. Rather it was Virginia which Jefferson established or land grant colleges Lincoln established. Over time all this universities went from free to tuition based. This not all Reagan but we was certainly as big of a part in in as anyone.
Although this does not have to do with the cost of college itself his economic policies of doubling the payroll tax on working families, slashing the wealthy tax cuts, pulling investment money out the economy, and not enforcing the Sherman Anti Trust Act hurt the middle class making college more of burden.
By the way it is about time we had any president start enforcing the Sherman Anti Trust again. President Obama I am looking at you. Maybe in 2024 or something we will have president Elizabeth Warren. We need get tough on the banks.
I am a dreamer, but both parties should embrace this. We can't solve this with taxes only and spending reductions only. We have dug ourselves way too deep. I doubt either side will embrace this tho in a serious manner. Each side will point to how the other side isn't realistic. Damn shame.
Report: New Alan Simpson-Erskine Bowles plan - Kevin Robillard - POLITICO.com
Andrew Ferguson wrote a book about this a little while back ( I think it was named Crazy U: One Dad’s Crash Course in Getting His Kid Into College. In it, he pinpointed when tuition rates detached from inflation. The starting point? 1975. Around 1975, costs detached themselves from the rest of the economy and angled sharply skyward. Annual increases of 5 and 6 percent above inflation have been common ever since.
Additionally, when college attendance took off, federal grants failed to keep up. Take for example BEOG (documented in the article below). Viewed in 1997 constant dollars,
in 1975, the maximum BEOG grant was $4,000; in 1997, it was $2,700. Private institutions have had to make up the difference in the form of institutional financial aid, putting more pressure on tuition.
Please read this article. It puts a great deat of blame on things like governance, society norms, Federal Gov't programs, External Actors and so on. Well worth the read.
http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ffp0005s.pdf