ronburgundy
Contributor
When I went to university, not only were all of the fees paid for from taxation, but they also provided me with a cash award that was enough to live on (albeit frugally, and with subsidised rent from the university). At no time during my university education did I have a job, nor did I get any money from family or friends; I did borrow a few hundred pounds from a bank, but it was never on the cards that I might borrow thousands, or tens of thousands. This was at the end of the 1980s. I was amongst the last people in the UK to have the benefit of that system. I am pretty sure that had I not been able to access this funding from the public purse, I would not have been able to go to university at all.
My subsequent employment has never been in specific field I studied (Molecular Biology), although I did work for a pharmaceutical company in a variety of non-technical roles for about 12 years; I now work in IT, in a technical role that has no relationship to the biological sciences at all. I have no doubt that my education played a vital part in making me a net contributor to society - and I have no doubt that the taxes I have paid since have covered the initial investment made in my education many times over.
The only 'reason' I can see that that system was dumped is because some people (in particular Margaret Thatcher and her government) had an ideological horror of the idea that anybody might get more than their share, or might be able to play the system in any way. They were more than happy to see a worse overall outcome for the United Kingdom, as long as they could thereby ensure that fewer people were able to free-load. Ha! Take that, face. Don't look so pretty now you have no nose, do you?![]()
I don't understand. Since you didn't have skin in the game, how in the world did you ever complete your education?
This passive aggressive attempt to mock the "commitment" argument has identical "logic" to the following anti-gun control argument:
"I don't understand. Since you own 10 assault rifles that you got without a check or wait at a gun show, how is it possible that you have never killed anyone?"
Both are completely invalid strawman distortions of the arguments they pretend to be mocking. The issue is not that every student would waste their opportunity if their education were free (just like not every assault rifle sold results in a killing).
The point is that the number of students that don't put in the effort to get an education in college would increase, if the opportunity was increased for them to do so without any cost to themselves. This is a virtual certainty based only on 2 undeniable, evidence verified facts: 1) many students go to college without much if any internal drive to get educated and merely use college as a way of deferring responsibility and choice making about their future; 2) when people lack an internal motive to do something, then external motives like cost of doing it or not largely determine how they act.
Many of these non-intrinsically motivated students are already wasting other people's money by not putting in sufficient effort in their college education, even though they or their parents also pay for a portion of it. IF we completely remove any negative cost of wasting this money, then that inherently decreases external motivation to get anything out of their education, which will impact the actions of those lacking sufficient internal motivation. Few statements about human behavior have more empirical support than that.
The rational response here is not to deny this fact of reality, but to argue that this increase cost of more students "screwing off" is outweighed by the increased benefit of getting education to people who do have internal motivation but are either scared off by the high risk of large debt or whose honest efforts in college are undermined by having to spend too much time working while in college. Also, there are ways that the "screwing off" costs can be reduced, such as the suggestion I made earlier that college carries a back-end cost ranging from free to X, depending upon actual course performance and graduation. IOW, increase effort via external motivations that puts a cost to the student, but not a cost on getting an actual education, but on wasting their opportunity and not getting one while still spending other people's money. This is not very radical. Something like it already happens with many grants and scholarships where if the student fails to maintain a particular GPA or fails to graduate, then they are in debt for the "free" money they were given up front.