Author Topic: 'Free' college in Europe isn't really free  (Read 866 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline SirLinksALot

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4,417
  • Gender: Male
'Free' college in Europe isn't really free
« on: July 01, 2016, 02:26:28 am »
SOURCE:  BUSINESS INSIDER

URL: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-do-european-countries-afford-free-college-2016-6

by: Abby Jackson



 While Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has garnered populist support with his debt-free college proposal, several economists recently told NPR's "Planet Money" that they don't like the plan.

Their main gripe: The plan should target students who actually need free tuition rather than spend money to pay for everybody's public education.

Still, Sanders has pointed to free tuition in  European countries like Germany and Denmark to prove the models can be successful.

"Free" is a relative term since tax payers absorb that cost.

European countries often differ greatly from the US in substantive ways. Their college enrollment percentages, for example, are much lower than in America.

Europe also traditionally has higher taxes than the US, which allows those countries to offer additional social services.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) released its 2015 report on the tax burden on earnings among member countries.

Their report ranks countries by their tax wedge percentage. The tax wedge is the dollar measure of the income tax rate. The countries below with the red arrows offer free college, with the exception of the US. There are other European countries that offer free college, but the countries below are the most well-known examples.



 While the tax wedge is certainly not driven solely by free-college tuition costs, the countries that offer this benefit have much higher income tax rates than the US. If the US were to go the route of European countries that finance free college by taxing the income of citizens, the tax wedge of 31.5% would likely increase.

Germany, with particularly high income taxes, has one of the most inclusive debt-free college programs, offering free college to foreign students as well.

European countries also differ substantively from the US in terms of the percentage of college attendees that their debt free models serve.

"Germany has a lower percentage of students go on to college than we have here in the US," Mark Huelsman, a senior policy analyst at think tank Demos, told ATTN.

The World Bank reports tertiary school enrollment by country, and the data supports Huelsman's claim. The World Bank defines tertiary school broadly, and includes universities, colleges, technical training institutes, community colleges, nursing schools, and research laboratories.

In 2012, the tertiary enrollment for European countries that offer debt free college, and the US, was as follows:



 The percentage is calculated by taking tertiary enrollment as a percentage of the total population of students who graduated within the last five years. For all countries, with the exception of Finland, the US has a much higher percentage of students who have enrolled in post-high school education.

While Sanders plans to fund free college by imposing a tax on "Wall Street speculators," free college in America would likely be a more complicated endeavor than it is in Europe.

Oceander

  • Guest
Re: 'Free' college in Europe isn't really free
« Reply #1 on: July 02, 2016, 01:06:59 pm »
Any college subsidies should come with a deferred price:  a 10% additional income tax on all income above a certain amount, for a period of years (like 10), or until the subsidy is repaid, with the option to prepay the subsidy at any time. 

Offline The_Reader_David

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,299
Re: 'Free' college in Europe isn't really free
« Reply #2 on: July 05, 2016, 02:31:42 pm »
The other thing always overlooked in talk of "Free" college is the fact that in countries where university educations are funded by tax moneys as a public good, universities have entrance examinations that make the SAT and ACT look like cakewalks, and those who don't get in go to trade schools or polytechnics (trade schools with a bit more academic heft).  Somehow an actual translation of their situation to the American context (say tax-payer paid educations for everyone scoring 1400 or better on the SAT or comparably on the ACT, with everyone else told to find a trade-school) wouldn't get any support, indeed would be derided by the leftists advocating "free" college as "racist".
« Last Edit: July 05, 2016, 02:32:57 pm by The_Reader_David »
And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know what this was all about.

Offline To-Whose-Benefit?

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7,613
  • Gender: Male
    • Wulf Anson Author
Re: 'Free' college in Europe isn't really free
« Reply #3 on: July 05, 2016, 10:32:04 pm »
Bill Whittle at TruthRevolt.


https://youtu.be/bdYOjUqlcFA

Considering what's going on on campus today, you might want to rethink a College Degree, even if it were possible to get one that was actually free.

http://campusreform.org

http://www.thecollegefix.com
My 'Viking Hunter' High Adventure Alternate History Series is FREE, ALL 3 volumes, at most ebook retailers including Ibooks, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, and more.

In Vol 2 the weapons come out in a winner take all war on two fronts.

Vol 3 opens with the rigged murder trial of the villain in a Viking Court under Viking law to set the stage for the hero's own murder trial.

http://wulfanson.blogspot.com