By Kevin D. Williamson
Sunday, December 13, 2020
One of Joe Biden’s first tests in office will be the
urgent question of giving a big pile of money to rich people.
Biden wants a little welfare for the affluent in the form
of a $10,000 college-loan giveaway accomplished through legislation, while the
Democrats’ Left wants a lot more welfare for the wealthy in the form of a
$50,000 student-loan giveaway accomplished through unilateral executive action.
And welfare for the wealthy is precisely what is in
question here: The majority of student debt is held by relatively high-income
people, poor people mostly are not college graduates, and those who attended
college but did not graduate hold relatively little college-loan debt, etc. As
the New York Times puts it, “Debt
relief overall would disproportionately benefit middle- to upper-class college
graduates.” Which ones? “Especially those who attended elite and expensive
institutions, and people with lucrative professional credentials like law and
medical degrees.”
The Democrats have become the party of moneyed urban and
suburban professionals, and, on the matter of college loans, progressives are
happy to see the rich get richer as Americans of more modest means subsidize
relatively high-income Democratic households. Biden’s approach is distinguished
from the progressives’ only by being a little less of the same.
Senator Ted Cruz (R., Texas), who paid off his own more
than $100,000 in Princeton and Harvard Law debt only a few years before running
for president, is among the Republicans who are unhappy about the proposed
giveaway. “I don’t believe any president has the authority to give away
hundreds of billions of dollars through the stroke of a pen,” he’s said.
But the president does have that authority. Congress gave
it to him. Congress can take it back.
Congress should.
The Higher Education Act of 1965 is one of many examples
of Congress’s delegating excessive authority to the executive. The law gives
the secretary of education the power to forgive student loans, a power that has
been used for many years in a discretionary way, for example, in the case of
students who acquire a “total
and permanent disability.” But there is not much in the statute suggesting
a limiting principle that would prevent a Biden administration from using this
power in a broad and categorical manner. Biden is not keen to test that, and
says he wants specific legislation — a handy excuse to sit on the issue if
Republicans retain control of the Senate.
Most people with student loans have payments amounting to
a relatively small share of their income (typically less than 10 percent and
often much less), and there already are programs in place for certain kinds of
hardship cases. College-debt forgiveness is not a program to relieve acute
economic suffering, nor, as the Times
notes, is it likely to prove an effective economic stimulus. It is nothing more
or less than the Democrats’ political commitment to servicing a particularly
upper-class form of entitlement mentality.
Take as your model the example of Michelle Obama
complaining about having to repay her college debt. Mrs. Obama attended
Princeton, and, like many Ivy League students, she attended at a discount. For
the relatively small part of the expense of her education that she was expected
to pay, she was provided with loans at a subsidized rate on very easy terms.
(Perhaps she was the world’s most credit-worthy teenager.) A Princeton degree
is not a guarantor of a happy and successful life, but it puts you right at the
front of the line. Mrs. Obama went on to scale the commanding heights of American
social and economic life, and when she complained — quite bitterly — about
simply having to repay the generous loans made to her at a subsidized rate in
order to provide her with the best
undergraduate education money can buy, thereby easing her way into a life
of genuine privilege, her complaints were met with general sympathy rather than
with revulsion at her audacious ingratitude.
That’s how deeply rooted the collegiate entitlement is.
There is much to disentangle when it comes to higher
education. We generally fail to distinguish adequately between liberal-arts
education and job training, which is
a separate and distinct undertaking. We try to counteract rising tuition by
offering generous loans, which only sends tuition higher still, for the same
reason low mortgage rates support rising house prices. We treat the bachelor’s
degree as a general-purpose credential, which is preposterous, and at the same
time we fail to adequately distinguish between the goals of undergraduate
education and everything else that goes on at our universities. With all that
money sloshing around the system, there is ample opportunity to create
sinecures for reliable Democratic allies, the results of which can be seen in
the exploding administrative payrolls of our institutions of higher learning,
where growing non-educational expenditures have far outpaced spending on actual
instruction.
The financial comingling of all of the diverse things
that go on at our universities leaves us in the perverse position of simultaneously
spending too much and too little on higher education. We spend too much money
on jobs for friendly mediocrities — deputy assistant vice presidents for
community engagement — and too little on high-impact enterprises such as basic
science research, which in the context of our major research universities
probably should be understood as something like a Big 12 football team: It
resides at the university, but it isn’t really a part of the general
undergraduate-education project.
But those are policy points, and college debt is a pure
culture-war issue.
Well-off college graduates of progressive sensibility
believe, and often say, that it is a crime that they ever were expected to pay
for college in the first place — elite education is another one of those scarce
goods, like health care, to which our Democratic friends have the bad habit of
ignorantly declaring meaningless “rights” for themselves and their
constituents. They see themselves as ornaments to society and believe that they
are entitled to be rewarded for their virtue, which is college-certified.
In other words, this is Thomas Sowell’s “anointed,” on
the march and hungry for patronage.
You’ll notice we are not having a national debate about
paying off poor people’s mortgages. We could do that just as easily if the
self-declared champions of the poor had any interest in anything other than
their own status and their own appetites.
They don’t.
Joe Biden doesn’t know much, but he probably understands that much, at least — and, if he doesn’t, he’ll learn the hard way.
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