Money and Finance
Is Education Overvalued? - by Vikram Mansharamani
College graduation is a time of great joy, of optimism, of forward-looking enthusiasm. Indeed, the very term “commencement” implies a positive new beginning. Unfortunately, this is not universally the case in America. Many students this year will graduate with questionable educations and mountains of debt; as more students go off to college and borrow money to do so, student loan debt in the United States is likely to top $1 trillion this year, exceeding credit card debt for the first time in history.
Might our strong belief in the value of an education be misguided? Is higher education in America a bubble about to burst? As a student of booms and busts, I have developed a framework for identifying unsustainable price dynamics, which are as applicable to higher education as they are to tulips, Japanese real estate, and Internet stocks.
Two primary dynamics seem to telegraph bubbly price action regularly through history’s great speculative eras. First, an unquestioning faith in the asset’s value leads to an ever-increasing universe of buyers, despite price increases. Second, the availability of “easy money” or “loose credit” is often driven by policies that generate significant moral hazard. Higher education in America today exhibits both of these warning signs.
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Related book: Boombustology
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Why I Spent 10th Grade Online - By Sophia Pink
The debate about online education is polarized — it’s either a grand solution for schools’ troubles, or it’s a menace. For example, the Economist recently reported that, because of MOOCs, “the ivory towers of academia have been shaken to their...
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What Campuses Can Learn From Online Teaching
Thanks to Will for passing this along. Higher education is at a crossroads not seen since the introduction of the printing press. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and other campuses, the upheaval today is coming from the technological change...
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For-profit Colleges, Vulnerable G.i.’s - By Hollister Petraeus
MILITARY personnel and their families are finding themselves under siege from for-profit colleges. A number of these schools focus on members of the armed forces with aggressive and often misleading marketing, and then provide little academic, administrative...
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7 In 10 Students Have Skipped Buying A Textbook Because Of Its Cost, Survey Finds
Found via John Hawks. For many students and their families, scraping together the money to pay for college is a big enough hurdle on its own. But a new survey has found that, once on a campus, many students are unwilling or unable to come up with more...
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Wcam: Wagging The Dogma
West Coast Asset Management refers to its investment style as “entrepreneurial.” We bring a business owners sense of focus, opportunity and involvement to the art of investing. Therefore, when we heard about the recent enterprise of Peter Thiel, an...
Money and Finance