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PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in Baltimore.
A recent New York Times editorial about the student debt says this:
"The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently released a study showing just why many young
people are being strangled by student loans. It found that 43 percent of 25-year-olds had
student debt in 2012, an increase from 27 percent in 2004."
Further on in the editorial, they say:
"According to the new study, student debt almost tripled between 2004 and 2012, and
is approaching $1 trillion, while the percentage of borrowers who were more than 90 days delinquent
had risen to 17 percent, from 10 percent in 2004. In addition, student loan debt was the
only kind of household debt that continued to rise through the Great Recession, and it
is now the second largest after mortgage debt."
Further on:
"The Federal Reserve study estimates that nearly 18 percent of borrowers now have student
loan debts of $25,000 to $50,000, and nearly 4 percent have balances greater than $100,000."
Now joining us to talk about the underlying causes of the student debt, possible solutions
to it, is Michael Hudson. He was a Wall Street financial analyst and is now a distinguished
research professor of economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. His recent books
are The Bubble and Beyond and Finance Capitalism and Its Discontents.
Thanks for joining us, Michael.
MICHAEL HUDSON: Thank you, Paul.
JAY: So let's get into the sort of underlying systemic reasons why there was so much student
debt, and then let's talk about what could be done about it.
HUDSON: Well, one reason there's so much student debt is the whole educational system has been
transformed completely in the last generation. When I went to school at the University of
Chicago, it cost about $500 a semester for me to go there in the 1950s. Now it's about
$25,000 a semester.
JAY: Twenty-five thousand's a deal compared to some schools.
HUDSON: To some schools. And what it means now is that people had thought that getting
a higher education was going to be the way into the middle class. But now it's become
a larger burden on them than the mortgage debt, and especially now that the lower fifth
of Americans can't get mortgage debts. Student loans can absorb 25 or 30 percent of their
income, as much as housing used to do.
So the problem is that education has been financialized. Just like roads are being turned
into toll roads and sold off to Wall Street firms, you've had the school system basically
become an appendage of the commercial banking system.
And it's interesting that when The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal talk about
student debt, they talk about it from two perspectives. One, how can we politicians
save the banks from losing money on the debt? By tightening the screws on the debtors. We've
got to make these deadbeats pay. And The Wall Street Journal today said, well, student loans
are just another example of Obama's socialism. Well, it's not socialism when you don't have
the state running the education.
But when you have a privatized education department school running it and when you've had a phenomenon
of last ten years of--first of all, you've had much less public support of education,
less revenue sharing from the government, less state support. And at the same time,
you've had an increasing financialization of the organization of the schools.
For instance, the presidents of the universities, their cronies, their middle management, their
sub middle management, and their top middle management with no-show jobs have proliferated.
And how do they pay the top administrators? People like the new Treasury secretary, Lew,
was at NYU, and there was a big to-do.
This week at New York University there was a no-confidence vote in the president of the
university, because they say, you turned a school into an adjunct of the bank. In New
York City, the second- and third-largest real estate owners were Columbia University and
New York University. So in essence, New York University was a real estate company that
got tax exemption on its holdings in exchange for holding classes in some of its universities.
When New York University bought a spaghetti company, they said, that's part of the educational
process; we want tax exemption on that. It went to court. They weren't allowed to pull
that trick.
But basically now that they have raised the tuition so sharply that the results of the
tuition have not gone to pay for higher professors. They have been replacing full-time tenured
professors with part-time professors. The president of New York University last week
said, we're in business to make money, basically, and if we can save money by hiring part-time
professors at one-tenth the rate of tenured professors, we're going to do it. And let
me tell you, nobody has job security at New York University. So you're having the tuition
go up.
And the question is: how are they going to make the students pay for it? Well, in 2005
they rewrote the bankruptcy law so that the government would guarantee student loans,
so they would create this vast, $1 trillion market for the banks in making student loan,
a market bigger than the banks' credit card. And at the same time, the Republicans in Congress--or
the Democrats got the Republicans to pressure them to say, well, if the public's guaranteeing
it, we have to make sure that the students who borrow cannot wipe out this loan by bankruptcy.
In America, normally in every country, if you go into debt, you're allowed to wipe out
your loan when you go bankrupt and you can't pay. Well, students are graduating now with
a $200,000, $300,000 worth of student loan debt. They are unable to get jobs. They're
living with their parents. They cannot afford to marry and form new households.
JAY: In fact, there was a recent study that the majority of new jobs won't even require
a high school diploma, never mind a university education.
HUDSON: That's right. But all the same, getting a university education is the entry price
to the middle class. But instead of being an entry price to the middle class, it's the
road to debt peonage.
JAY: Okay. So if you look at the New York Times editorial I was quoting, when it comes
to solutions, it's a public-private partnership for refinancing. It's not about breaking the
chains between students and banks.
HUDSON: That's right. And the result is what they've done is raise the cost of living tremendously.
Basically, 100 years ago everybody thought of education as being a public service, much
like roads and public utilities. And the idea was to keep down the price of public services
so that you lower the cost of living. And that lowers the cost of business, because
companies don't have to pay new recruits, new labor, so much that they have to pay for
these services. The idea was to make the economy more competitive.
When people are talking about de-industrialization of America and you realize what an engineer,
a doctor, a dentist, a lawyer has to pay to get through school, you realize why American
labor is being priced out of the market. So much of the income of--25 percent to 30 percent
of the income goes to pay the student loan debt, 40 percent--43 percent now under government
guarantees just for mortgage debt. Then already you're dealing with about 70 percent of income
before you begin to pay the other 15 percent in wage withholding for Social Security and
Medicare. When people ask, why is the economy slowing down so much, why are people not buying
the goods and services they produce, well, the reason is they're paying the banks.
So what they've done by insisting on tight credit standards for the debtors, by not letting
them wipe out the debt through bankruptcy, by not reducing the student loans to the real
ability to repay, they're contributing to the depression.
And the government is--if it were running schools like a public utility, like an electric
company or a gas company, they wouldn't let the upper management be taking more and more
money. They wouldn't let Mr. Lew, who was not even the president of NYU, make $1.2 million
in salary, get paid $3 million when he left. They wouldn't let this kind of siphoning off
of wealth at the top, pressing down the professors, lowering the teaching standards, and just
telling the students, we're here not to give you education, we're here to give you a union
card to get into the middle class, and it's going to cost you. And that's what they're
selling. They're selling the union card to get into--.
JAY: The demand that came out of the Quebec student strike last summer, which--hundreds
of thousands of people in the streets, and it's a demand you can see in student movements
in different parts of the world, is that university, as all education, should be a right and there
should actually be no tuition. Is that what it means when you're saying education should
be a public utility?
HUDSON: Yes, and that's how it used to be 100 years ago. For instance, in New York City,
it cost more money to get your child into kindergarten and grade school than it does
to go to college in most universities throughout the whole country.
JAY: Private. Private. Private.
HUDSON: Private school. America was divided into squares all for the local education districts,
and the whole American tax system, the American geography was shaped by public education.
Here is a school district. It's going to finance itself by local property taxes. Well, now
what's happened is there's been a disconnect between property taxes and education. The
property owners, especially the schools that are the largest ones, don't have to pay property
taxes. All of a sudden, instead of having the property owners pay for education, you
freed property owners in this country from having to pay. The government is refusing
to pay and is pushing all of the pressure for education on the students. And because
students haven't yet got a job, they're lent the money.
So somehow they've turned the educational system into an adjunct of the banking system
and the real estate system, just to make more money for--a vehicle for banks to make money
that is guaranteed. They're guaranteed at a markup. And then they say, our most profitable
area of lending is student loans, and that's our compensation for risk. And the risk, apparently,
is that they can't give enough money to the politicians to guarantee to pay all of the
loans for the defaults that you mentioned at the beginning of this interview.
Of course there are defaults. If you graduate and the economy's shrinking and there are
no jobs, of course you're not going to be able to pay. Of course you're going to live
with your parents unless your parents give you a trust fund. And you're not going to
be able to buy new apartments. And the educational--the student loan debt is part of the overall financial
problem that's depressing the economy right now.
JAY: Great. Thanks very much, Michael.
HUDSON: Thank you.
JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.