Tulip Subsidies

A parable:

Higher education is in a bubble much like the old tulip bubble. In the past forty years, the price of college has dectupled (quadrupled when adjusting for inflation). It used to be easy to pay for college with a summer job; now it is impossible. At the same time, the unemployment rate of people without college degrees is twice that of people who have them. Things are clearly very bad and Senator Sanders is right to be concerned.

But, well, when we require doctors to get a college degree before they can go to medical school, we’re throwing out a mere $5 billion, barely enough to house all the homeless people in the country. But Senator Sanders admits that his plan would cost $70 billion per year. That’s about the size of the entire economy of Hawaii. It’s enough to give $2000 every year to every American in poverty.

At what point do we say “Actually, no, let’s not do that, and just let people hold basic jobs even if they don’t cough up a a hundred thousand dollars from somewhere to get a degree in Medieval History”?

I’m afraid that Sanders’ plan is a lot like the tulip subsidy idea that started off this post. It would subsidize the continuation of a useless tradition that has turned into a speculation bubble, prevent the bubble from ever popping, and disincentivize people from figuring out a way to route around the problem, eg replacing the tulips with daffodils.

(yes, it is nice to have college for non-economic reasons too, but let’s be honest – if there were no such institution as college, would you, totally for non-economic reasons, suggest the government pay poor people $100,000 to get a degree in Medieval History? Also, anything not related to job-getting can be done three times as quickly by just reading a book.)

If I were Sanders, I’d propose a different strategy. Make “college degree” a protected characteristic, like race and religion and sexuality. If you’re not allowed to ask a job candidate whether they’re gay, you’re not allowed to ask them whether they’re a college graduate or not. You can give them all sorts of examinations, you can ask them their high school grades and SAT scores, you can ask their work history, but if you ask them if they have a degree then that’s illegal class-based discrimination and you’re going to jail. I realize this is a blatant violation of my usual semi-libertarian principles, but at this point I don’t care.

Never happen. It makes too much sense.

[Afternoon update]

“College is not a commodity. Stop treating it like one“:

A college education, then, if it is a commodity, is no car. The courses the student decides to take (and not take), the amount of work the student does, the intellectual curiosity the student exhibits, her participation in class, his focus and determination — all contribute far more to her educational “outcome” than the college’s overall curriculum, much less its amenities and social life. Yet most public discussion of higher ed today pretends that students simply receive their education from colleges the way a person walks out of Best Buy with a television.

The results of this kind of thinking are pernicious. Governors and legislators, as well as the media, treat colleges as purveyors of goods, students as consumers and degrees as products. Students get the message. If colleges are responsible for outcomes, then students can feel entitled to classes that do not push them too hard, to high grades and to material that does not challenge their assumptions or make them uncomfortable. Hence colleges too often cater to student demands for trigger warnings, “safe rooms,” and canceled commencement speakers. When rating colleges, as everyone from the president to weekly magazines insist on doing nowadays, people use performance measures such as graduation rates and time to degree as though those figures depended entirely upon the colleges and not at all upon the students.

What a government-driven disaster.

5 thoughts on “Tulip Subsidies”

  1. You can give them all sorts of examinations, you can ask them their high school grades and SAT scores, you can ask their work history, but if you ask them if they have a degree then that’s illegal class-based discrimination and you’re going to jail.

    The worst part (possibly) is that “college degree” or “high school graduate” (formerly, and proxied by “high school grades” anyway) is simply being used as a proxy for “can you read and write and do basic math”, most of the time.

    And “exams” will get you sued for discriminatory disparate impact (see any number of examples, most famously fire departments), sadly.

    Kill “disparate impact” suits, and kill “discrimination by proxy” sorts of claims, and the whole problem can resolve itself; people trying to hire can actually look at the hiring information they want, rather than second or third order proxies that aren’t lawsuit-bait.

    (It’s not 1965.

    There’s no longer a large set of people who want to not hire black people simply because they’re black, that you have to force to not do so by elaborate interventions and threats.)

  2. I find the comment about the book a bit interesting. It’s another aspect of the higher education bubble. You can go into any bookstore or library and buy a book on Medieval History. It might cost you $20-$30 for a nice hardback to put on the shelf after reading. But the tenure Professor has a monopoly on textbook for the class, and you would have to buy the 11th version of the book, because it was updated just this Spring, and last year’s 10th version is no longer acceptable. That newly updated textbook will cost you $100.

    By the way, I checked my numbers on Amazon. There is indeed a $100 textbook “Medieval History: A Short Story”. The version is mentioned, but the comments to it mention an 8th version and a 10th version, and whatever version costs $100 is past the 10th version. This is Medieval History, and it needs updates every so many semesters? I think it is a racket.

  3. The US Government should just decide if everyone should have college education or not. If everyone should have college education then the State should provide for one just like they do with highschool.

    They also need to have more control over teacher salaries and decrease administrative overhead but that’s another issue.

  4. With the cost of college what it is, doesn’t that create the potential for real education alternatives?

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