"A college degree costs more now but delivers less. In the 1950s and 1960s, college graduates working in low-paying, dead-end service jobs was unheard of; now, it’s common."
Let me translate this: If an industry massively over produces a product, bad things happen. Product sits on the shelves or to clear the market, the price has to be lowered below the cost of production. These economic facts of life apply to the useless degrees pumped out by the highly subsidized education sector as much as they apply to the production of housing, oil or solar cells.
The President's solution to the problem is to increase the subsidies to education, LOL. The result should be obvious. Even lower prices and even more product sitting around that no one wants.
Let me translate this: If an industry massively over produces a product, bad things happen. Product sits on the shelves or to clear the market, the price has to be lowered below the cost of production. These economic facts of life apply to the useless degrees pumped out by the highly subsidized education sector as much as they apply to the production of housing, oil or solar cells.
The President's solution to the problem is to increase the subsidies to education, LOL. The result should be obvious. Even lower prices and even more product sitting around that no one wants.
