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Student Loans: Do College Students Borrow Too Much--Or Not Enough?

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors move the discussion of student loans away from anecdote by establishing a framework for considering the use of student loan in the optimal financing of collegiate investments and show that enrolling in college is equivalent to signing up for a lottery with large expected gains, but it is also a better investment today than a generation ago.
Abstract
Total student loan debt rose to over $800 billion in June 2010, overtaking total credit card debt outstanding for the first time. By the time this article sees print, the continually updated Student Loan Debt Clock will show an accumulated total of roughly $1 trillion. Borrowing to finance educational expenditures has been increasing - more than quadrupling in real dollars since the early 1990s. The sheer magnitude of these figures has led to increased public commentary on the level of student borrowing. [The authors] move the discussion of student loans away from anecdote by establishing a framework for considering the use of student loans in the optimal financing of collegiate investments. From a financial perspective, enrolling in college is equivalent to signing up for a lottery with large expected gains - indeed, the figures presented here suggest that college is, on average, a better investment today than it was a generation ago - but it is also a lottery with significant probabilities of both larger positive, and smaller or even negative, returns. [The authors] look to available - albeit limited - evidence to assess which types of students are likely to be borrowing too much or too little.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Skills, education, and the rise of earnings inequality among the “other 99 percent”

TL;DR: The central role of both the supply and demand for skills in shaping inequality is documented, why skill demands have persistently risen in industrialized countries is discussed, and the economic value of inequality is considered alongside its potential social costs.
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Priceless: The Nonpecuniary Benefits of Schooling

TL;DR: The American Economic Association (AEA) publications are available for personal or classroom use without fee provided that copies are not distributed for profit or direct commercial advantage and that copies show this notice on the first page or initial screen of a display along with the full citation, including the name of the author as mentioned in this paper.
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The Nature of Credit Constraints and Human Capital

TL;DR: This paper developed a human capital model with borrowing constraints explicitly derived from government student loan (GSL) programs and private lending under limited commitment, which helps explain the persistent strong positive correlation between ability and schooling in the U.S., as well as the rising importance of family income for college attendance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Making College Worth It: A Review of the Returns to Higher Education

TL;DR: To make the best college investment, Oreopoulos and Petronijevic stress, prospective students must give careful consideration to selecting the institution itself, the major to follow, and the eventual occupation to pursue.
Book

Higher Education in the Digital Age

TL;DR: Surveying the dizzying array of new technology-based teaching and learning initiatives, including the highly publicized emergence of "massive open online courses" (MOOCs), William G. Bowen argues that such technologies could transform traditional higher education, allowing it at last to curb rising costs by increasing productivity, while preserving quality and protecting core values.
References
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Book

Capitalism and Freedom

TL;DR: In the classic bestseller, Capitalism and Freedom, Friedman presents his view of the proper role of competitive capitalism as both a device for achieving economic freedom and a necessary condition for political freedom as mentioned in this paper.
Book

The race between education and technology

TL;DR: The authors The Race between education and technology: America Once Led and Can Win the Race for Tomorrow The Race Between Education and Technology: America's Graduation from High School and Mass Higher Education in the Twentieth Century Part III.
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How much will student loans go down if college was free?

The information provided does not mention anything about how much student loans would go down if college was free.