worry, on 24 June 2019 - 05:37 PM, said:
Like this comic, though this isn't meant super snarky towards Cause, but I think the logic of means-testing benefits -- which can sometimes seem sensible at first glance -- is worth deflating. It just winds up not helping the people in most need of help, in a cut off your nose to spite your face kind of way.
In terms of striking at the root cause of amassing student debt, before treating the symptoms -- I will say that Bernie has already been leading on this issue for a long time, and Warren's plan is good too. Neither is neglecting the cause. I just don't necessarily think that has to come before this. Do them both, in whatever order you can get them done (and if you can't get either done yet, obviously pulling the whole conversation leftward is in itself a worthy goal, and getting everyone on record clarifies things too).
I don't think a means test is necessary. Especially because America has a progressive tax scheme, so the rich people fund social services to a greater degree, I see no problem with them also getting the benefits.
However my own countires problems and recent foray into free education are colouring my view. My country has a progressive tax system, so the rich people fund most of the social services but we also have means testing so the rich don't benefit from them. This means the rich are taxed on both eends so to speak, they fund education for the poor but still need to pay for their kids university. Not to mention that more people receive social services in my country (approx. 16 million) than are registred tax payers (approx. 6 million). Now for a host of reasons, including that my countried goverrment is incompetent, inept and highly corrupt, we recently made university education free for the poor. However we have no made primary or secondary school free, I don't think we made technical schools for plumbing and eleictrians etc free. Its a balls up because we made tertiary education free above more immediate needs like say primary school and it was rushed through as a kind of bribe for support so many details were not ironed out. Such as can someone who barely passed high svhool qualify for free ducation in a tertiary course he may very well not pass, how many times can he try repeat the course for free? If someone drops out do they owe the money back?
This is what is bothering me about the student debt amnesty. I think America can, and should fund free education and health care. They don't have South Africas tax problem. I find it amazing / frightening that America one of the most economically powerful nations in the world has no social safety net. Social Services is insurance, I don't ever want the free chemo but I'm willing to pay 100 dollars a year for a stranger to get it, so if I do get cancer I don't pay the 100 thousand dollars for me all at once.
However the current debt amnest seems to be light on details, or I haven't heard the specifics at any rate. I could understand giving everyone a once off amnesty of X dollars. But to give everyone however much they need seems to benefit those who took out the most debt. Going forward it seems again that the free education should cover X dollars, not however much any university wants to charge and since America has private universities which can teach anything they want Id assume they need a list of approved universities that qualify. Maybe all this is fleshed out but all I saw on CNN is that Bernie wants to pay of debt with a tax on wall street.