On one hand, culturally, we pushed young people into colleges and universities at ever-increasing and frankly unethical price points. Many people have spent "buy a house" money on education. These people are then given a heavy burden which holds them back significantly both socially (raising families) and financially (owning a home, saving for retirement).
On the other hand however is the many people who decided not to go to school because it was simply unaffordable. They went to work instead, and often in the kinds of careers that are unappealing to college graduates who prefer white-collar work. Any student loan forgiveness is coming directly from the pockets of these people, who have on-average lower incomes and shorter career spans than their white-collar counterparts.
It's easy to see both sides on this one. The only meaningful solution I can see is to remove the (again, unethical) protections which prevent students from declaring bankruptcy over student loans. In turn, this would hopefully force wiser lending and more price-competition to bring the cost down.
Bankruptcy for student loans should be allowed, with appropriate restrictions against the obvious abuses.
I think the federal government should cap the student loans amounts they secure also and standardize all fee and interest service that can be applied to them. That cap should be modest too. The ability for students to get larger and larger loans is the primary driver of tuition fee inflation.
Lastly, and this is maybe a bit controversial. But any university that is either non-profit or receives government subsidies must have a limits on the amounts paid to executive staff like presidents and also a limit on the ratio of administrative spending to education spending. The crazy growth of the the former compared to the latter is form on theft from the students, in my humble opinion.
Except you don't have to tax low earners! Progressive taxation is the norm in the US; you just need to tax where the wealth lies, and the ways in which it moves.
2. Cost of living rises, wages follow (but not closely enough)
3. Buying power is decreased, but the tax brackets don't change much
4. The lower income groups proceeds to pay more taxes than they "should" while simultaneously being the group that can afford it the least. At the same time, this group is the most affected by inflation, hurting even more.
The money printer hurts everyone. Spinning it up as the expedited solution to every problem for political expedience is how we ended up with an enormous and ever-growing amount of debt.
Who gets taxed only really matters for a specific federal expense if the spending were being covered directly by an increase in taxes. Any money spent on buying up student debt will come from new federal debt without a tax increase or levee to pay for it.
On one hand, culturally, we pushed young people into colleges and universities at ever-increasing and frankly unethical price points. Many people have spent "buy a house" money on education. These people are then given a heavy burden which holds them back significantly both socially (raising families) and financially (owning a home, saving for retirement).
On the other hand however is the many people who decided not to go to school because it was simply unaffordable. They went to work instead, and often in the kinds of careers that are unappealing to college graduates who prefer white-collar work. Any student loan forgiveness is coming directly from the pockets of these people, who have on-average lower incomes and shorter career spans than their white-collar counterparts.
It's easy to see both sides on this one. The only meaningful solution I can see is to remove the (again, unethical) protections which prevent students from declaring bankruptcy over student loans. In turn, this would hopefully force wiser lending and more price-competition to bring the cost down.