Republican presidential contender Ron Paul said Sunday he wants to end federal student loans, calling it a failed program that has put students $1 trillion in debt when there are no jobs and when the quality of education has deteriorated.
Paul unveiled a plan last week to cut $1 trillion from the federal budget that would eliminate five Cabinet departments, including education. He’s also wants young workers to be able to opt out of Social Security.
The student loan program is not part of those cuts, but Paul said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that he’d kill the loan program eventually if he were president. That could put him at odds with some of his young followers, many of whom are college students.
Paul blamed government intervention in the economy for rising tuition.
“Just think of all this willingness to want to help every student get a college education,” said Paul, who graduated from Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania before earning a medical degree at the Duke University School of Medicine. “I went to school when we had none of those. I could work my way through college and medical school because it wasn’t so expensive.”
Annual tuition for Gettysburg College is $42,610 for the 2011-2012 academic year. Annual tuition at Duke’s medical school runs $46,621, according to its web site.
Amid such rising costs, borrowing for college is at record levels. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York says students and parents took out a record $100 billion last year, and owe more on student loans - more than $1 trillion is outstanding - than credit cards...
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Monday, October 31, 2011
Ron Paul: End U.S. student loans
This from Politico:
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4 comments:
Below, I'm editing a comment from November 2, 2011 5:30 PM for minor name-calling. ...just trying to be consistent and it got past me the first time.
Viable candidate? End student loans? Ron Paul's vision of America overlooks economic realities. Students need loans to make college a relaity. His plan would lead to a more rigid class structure in which only the very wealthy and the very smart attend University. Ron Paul ... ha[s] done more to marginalize himself with this comment than anything he has said previously.
Is "idiot" that bad?
Of course not. I just don't want to spend my time figuring out which instances of name calling are OK and which are not. Neither is it necessary for the discussion.
Being a college student who has to take out loans to even attend school, I am totally against this. If the government takes away student loans, I may have to drop out of school. My family does not make enough to put me through college, keep a house and a car, and put food on the table. And I won't be able to make much money at a part time job to help. The college attendance rates will decline greatly. This may make colleges cheaper but will it be enough that we won't need loans at all? I doubt it. Then we need to add in housing and books to this equation. The price of education is ridiculous, but you cannot get a good job unless you have a degree. This has become a lose lose situation.
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