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February 15, 2011

Mises Daily

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The Rise of 
Statism<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=e32c95d5af&e=6fb716ec66>
*by Murray N. Rothbard*

Merger Monday and the Destruction of
Wealth<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=6bd28f7457&e=6fb716ec66>
*by Doug French*

The Education Bubble Is Fuel for
Revolt<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=3a7f85f8a9&e=6fb716ec66>
*by Joshua Fulton* on February 15, 2011

Would you like your college education to be free? Sure, who wouldn't? Well,
the people of Tunisia and Egypt are learning that whenever the government
supplies something, it is never really "free."

In Tunisia, "free" university education is guaranteed to anyone who passes
the government's
exams<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=f36c233a93&e=6fb716ec66>at
the end of high school. Largely as a result of this, the number of
Tunisians who graduated college more than
tripled<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=7635b380b2&e=6fb716ec66>in
the last ten years. This may sound like a good thing, but it has
produced
a glut of graduates.

Fifty-Seven percent of young Tunisians entering the labor market are college
educated. This is while only 30
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=a0aed84bf2&e=6fb716ec66>of
Americans earn a college degree by the time they are 27. Recent
Tunisian
college grads have an unemployment rate approximately three times
higher<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=89eb11b401&e=6fb716ec66>than
the national average of 15 percent. This is up
ninefold<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=aa3fcdeaff&e=6fb716ec66>from
1994.

The reason for this is not necessarily because having a college education
hinders people in getting a job, but because so many college grads are
entering the labor market at a time when there are few jobs.

Additionally, government domination of the educational system discourages
economic growth. The Tunisian Ministry of Education decides what
major<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=95124825fa&e=6fb716ec66>students
will have. Students are not
allowed to change
fields<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=453850b1a4&e=6fb716ec66>during
their course of study. This control reduces the type of expertise
necessary to create successful businesses.

The Tunisian educational system is also enormously expensive. Of Tunisia's
GDP, 7.2 
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=cd044dea3e&e=6fb716ec66>is
spent on education, more than any European or North American country
beside Denmark and Iceland, which also spends 7.2 percent of its GDP on
education. Tunisia's educational results, however, appear to be horrible. A
2002 UNESCO report puts its graduation rate at about 30
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=be278c7de8&e=6fb716ec66>
.

Having such a large number of unemployed youths can be dangerous. As George
Mason University sociologist Jack A.
Goldstone<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=651364066d&e=6fb716ec66>notes,
"Educated youth have been in the vanguard of rebellions against
authority certainly since the French Revolution and in some cases even
earlier."

In fact, the Tunisian protests began after a recent graduate killed
himself<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=201fcc282c&e=6fb716ec66>because
government authorities confiscated his fruit stand when they
discovered he did not have an "official" permit. The BBC reported that
most<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=1101bd52b6&e=6fb716ec66>of
the early protesters were unemployed recent graduates.

Like Tunisia, Egypt also has a massive youth-unemployment problem.
Unsurprisingly, it also has a system of "free" college education.

In Egypt, enrollment in tertiary education increased from 14
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=186b30a5ea&e=6fb716ec66>in
1990 to approximately 35
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=7be71ccaf8&e=6fb716ec66>in
2005. Yet this has not helped the unemployment rate among recent
grads.
The national Egyptian unemployment rate is 9.4 percent, comparable to the
United States, but the unemployment rate for people between the ages of 15
and 29 is 87.2 
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=b06b6c947f&e=6fb716ec66>.
College graduates, largely because of their age, have a ten times higher
unemployment rate than for those who did not attend college.
<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=fd89a7410f&e=6fb716ec66>

The Egyptian government also rigidly controls the educational system, just
like in Tunisia. A centralized government committee
controls<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=0ea245e528&e=6fb716ec66>decisions
regarding curriculum, program development, and deployment of
faculty and staff for institutions of higher learning across the entire
country. Private universities were only legalized in 1992, and enrollment is
very 
small.<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=ce5461e397&e=6fb716ec66>

In Egypt, educational expenditures were 3.7
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=bd785f443f&e=6fb716ec66>of
GDP in 2007. By most accounts the Egyptian education system is
underfunded. Its educational standards were called
"abysmal"<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=86222a318c&e=6fb716ec66>by
the
*Economist*. Fewer than half of all students graduate, and many universities
are viewed as diploma
mills.<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=10a1e87147&e=6fb716ec66>

Although the Egyptian government may have avoided some of the economic costs
of "free" higher education that the Tunisian government has incurred, it has
not avoided the social costs.

We, in America, might not be as far away from the problems of Tunisia and
Egypt as some may be inclined to think.

>From 1997 to 2007, full-time enrollment in US tertiary education increased 34
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=f4345acecd&e=6fb716ec66>.
The average college student graduates with
$24,000<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=93a217477e&e=6fb716ec66>in
debt, a 40
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=93a0b7930c&e=6fb716ec66>real
increase from 1997. In 2008, only 57
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=0cfc48e462&e=6fb716ec66>of
students enrolled in a four year college graduated within six years.
The
unemployment rate for 16 to 24-year-olds is 52
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=e8f20087f9&e=6fb716ec66>.
The underemployed as a group may be as
large<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=42a651fc3a&e=6fb716ec66>as
the unemployed in America. For example, in 1970 only 3 percent of mail
carriers had a bachelor's degree, while today the number is 12
percent<http://mises.us1.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=c17db1820e&e=6fb716ec66>
.

Although our case may not be as extreme as that of Tunisia or Egypt, we are
headed in the same direction. And just like in Tunisia and Egypt, our
education bubble is fueled by governmental policy.

Government accreditation laws keep potential institutions of higher
education out of the market, which allows the institutions already in the
market to raise their prices. Accreditation institutions can also force
institutions of higher education to make changes that increase costs. For
instance, the American Bar Association forced the University of Colorado Law
School to increase the number of electrical
outlets<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=d34f8b97c9&e=6fb716ec66>in
the library and to construct an instructional court room, which the
university claimed caused them to increase tuition.

Government aid also helps institutions of higher education inflate prices.
For instance, although the cost of higher education in real dollars
increased by 68 percent between 1986 and 2006, when increased government aid
is accounted for the real cost to the student increased by only 29 percent.
The ceiling of how much students are able to pay is artificially raised,
allowing the colleges to charge
more.<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=b17fdeafcc&e=6fb716ec66>

<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=d71b9e807f&e=6fb716ec66>

$15 
$10<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=617c8a1971&e=6fb716ec66>

Also, if a student defaults on a loan backed by the government, which is by
far the most 
common<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=3551de7d81&e=6fb716ec66>kind
of loan, the lender does not bear the loss, the
government 
does<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=f479c93edf&e=6fb716ec66>.
This obviously encourages the lenders to lend more freely than they
otherwise would. Enormous losses have been socialized. There is currently $730
billion<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=8b15b26a70&e=6fb716ec66>of
outstanding student-loan debt, and the overwhelming majority of losses
will be borne by the government if it is not repaid. Only 40 percent of all
student debt is being actively repaid.

There are more causes to the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt than just the
higher-education bubble, but the effect it has had cannot be ignored. We
could be bringing ourselves dangerously close to the point when all the
people of our country have to learn, one way or another, that nothing the
government provides is ever free.

Josh Fulton is currently pursuing his MFA in creative writing at UNC,
Wilmington where he is also a teaching assistant. He's been published in
Liberty, The North American Review, USA Today.com, NPR.com and elsewhere. He
is the founder of the UNC, Wilmington Libertarians, and is running for city
council in Wilmington, NC. See his
website<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=9164fdb697&e=6fb716ec66>.
Send him mail <joshfulto...@gmail.com>. See Joshua Fulton's article
archives<http://mises.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bf16b152ccc444bdbbcc229e4&id=4cc8a1be41&e=6fb716ec66>
.

Comment on the 
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