I don't think I can agree. In the US, education is not a relatively free market like housing. There is one big payer whose contribution dwarfs everyone else's. And the powers that be don't want to change this because it creates an elite club, a priesthood that excludes other people, and it allows the members of the club that are professors to be paid exorbitant salaries. The price of education will wax and wane, but may eventually become more like a collectible such as fine wine or art: the market contains few purchasers, but they are well-heeled, so the sky is the limit.
Most college education is not worth the paper it's printed on. There's been degree inflation for 30 years. As a result of the increased demand universities can charge more. It's aggregious that many university endowments earn enough to pay the tuition of their entire undergraduate programs.
Personally I think the country needs fewer Bachelor of Arts and more trade school degrees.