My sister's boyfriend is a bit of a hipster and posted this on Facebook. This article details how a minimum wage job can no longer afford to pay for college tuition.Now, that makes sense and all...but isn't the author forgetting financial aid, federal grants, etc that are in place and regularly used by students to pay for college? Not even including scholarships, I'm saying stuff that you just have to qualify for. I want to make sure before I go all 'loljournalismmath' on his status, so naturally I turn to TWW for some answers:http://www.cleveland.com/datacentral/index.ssf/2011/11/a_minimum_wage_job_no_longer_c.html
11/22/2011 8:17:30 AM
I guess the argument is there was once a time when you could pay your way through college just working some crappy job and not receiving any other monetary help. My great-grandfather paid his way through college during the Great Depression by selling shoes door-to-door. He must have been a pretty damn good salesman to sell destitute people enough shoes to go to college lol.
11/22/2011 8:19:42 AM
Probably part of the reason there are all these grants and scholarships is because the increased tuition.Our government would save money if we didn't need all these federal grants for people to go to college because they can afford to go to college.
11/22/2011 8:23:21 AM
All the financial aid and grants are the reason college is unaffordable, FYI. Same principle as the housing market. If the government dumps money into it, people will simply raise prices to take advantage. Colleges raised prices since there is an unlimited amount of government money available for tuition.Just as it was the feel-good political issue to get everyone houses, it is a feel-good political issue to pay for everyone's college. The unintended consequence is that college has become unaffordable.[Edited on November 22, 2011 at 8:27 AM. Reason : .]
11/22/2011 8:27:23 AM
^ Yep. This isn't really a problem because the minimum wage is too low. It's a problem because tuition is way too high.
11/22/2011 8:49:23 AM
Although a full time job on minimum wage isn't really enough to even make a living much less make a living and pay for college.
11/22/2011 8:52:45 AM
11/22/2011 8:53:08 AM
I would be more apt to blame ever increasing tuition costs and wistful spending at the university's level than minimum wage. Also, do a couple years at community college and then transfer in.
11/22/2011 8:53:45 AM
Fail thread
11/22/2011 8:54:01 AM
WTH IS WRONG WITH POOR PEOPLE?I KNOW THEY CAN'T AFFORD TO EAT OUT ANYMORE, BUT HAVEN'T THEY HEARD OF CREDIT CARDS???
11/22/2011 9:00:09 AM
^^^^ it's so sad how badly you missed what was said.
11/22/2011 9:06:41 AM
How about you try to not be a douche bag for once and not say anything.
11/22/2011 9:15:07 AM
I think the issue here is both the low minimum wage, that has not kept up with inflation...and the high college tuition, that has greatly surpassed inflation.
11/22/2011 9:17:26 AM
The first issue we must realize is that there is an issue that must be realized.
11/22/2011 9:19:02 AM
But is the issue that needs to be realize really the issue at hand, or is it actually and underlying issue of another issue that we have yet to realize about?THAT is the issue...
11/22/2011 9:21:22 AM
11/22/2011 9:21:46 AM
I wish more undergrad students would take the time to sit down and think about what they *honestly* expect to do with their degree once they've finished school. If the answer is, "I don't know," then your degree is worthless to you. I see it allllllllllllllllllllllllll the time with our work study students. So much money is getting dumped into an education that they have no idea what they want to do with it once finished. I'm not saying you should have your whole career life planned out by the time you're 18, but if you can't say, "Well I will either do A or B or C with this degree and this degree gives me the credentials needed to get an entry level job in those positions," you're doing it wrong.Anyway, point being, if less and less students would go to college for shit like basket weaving and medieval studies, maybe universities would cut those departments and save money, thus diminishing the needs to raise tuition all the time.
11/22/2011 9:22:50 AM
^^^ I never thought of it like that before. Perhaps I should keep a more open mind about things...Nah, I'm way too invested in my beliefs to be wrong about them at this point.[Edited on November 22, 2011 at 9:25 AM. Reason : ^Also, this. But that is not how college is marketed to high schoolers AT ALL]
11/22/2011 9:23:43 AM
11/22/2011 9:46:39 AM
11/22/2011 9:52:03 AM
that doesn't make sense because the system of loans and scholarships came about because colleges were perfectly happy catering to the elite. Its asinine to think if we stopped that system prices would just drop. There are other factors
11/22/2011 10:00:55 AM
11/22/2011 10:01:05 AM
^^ it's also asinine to think that it isn't having an effect on prices at all. you've got a system where people are told they need something. the cost is high, so they get loans. the people loaning the money have zero incentive to ensure that students can reasonably pay off the loan, because the loan can't be discharged in bankruptcy. and then, once the loan goes into default, the lender can charge 20-30% interest!so, you've got a product that people see as a necessity, which makes it valuable and expensive. you've got people with nothing to lose by lending money to the people who want that product, so the consumer has no real need, up front, to demand lower prices. what, exactly, do you think is going to happen in that situation?
11/22/2011 10:08:00 AM
moron
11/22/2011 10:08:10 AM
you're a pack_bryan if you don't think there was at least some level of elitism in higher education earlier in the century, dude
11/22/2011 10:15:11 AM
11/22/2011 10:23:07 AM
11/22/2011 10:47:59 AM
11/22/2011 2:46:08 PM
11/22/2011 3:27:57 PM
and the fatal flaw in your analaysis is that hospitals have to jack up their prices because they know insurance companies will only pay a percentage of what the hospitals asks for. ergo, insurance companies, themselves, help to increase prices]
11/22/2011 3:29:44 PM
Actually, I've saved $1000s by offering to pay in cash. Hidden cash rebates ftw.
11/22/2011 3:32:41 PM
11/22/2011 3:41:15 PM
Can always join the military or Coast Guard.
11/22/2011 3:47:01 PM
^^ what you still aren't understanding, though, is that the prices are still high precisely because the insurance companies get a percentage discount! you are correct that lots of the uninsured don't pay off their bills, nor do they plan to, because why does it matter? After a while, IIRC, it drops off your credit report. And that should be fixed. But, when most people are using insurance, it makes perfect sense that the hospital must also adjust for the fact that the insurance company is paying only a percentage of the bill.I would ask why the insurance company gets off like that. You say there's a power in buying in bulk, sure, but they still promised to pay the bill. Why does the bill magically become different on account of which person is paying it, even though the same person still received the treatment? Fact is, if the insurance company paid full price, the price would be lower. But they don't, so it isn't.
11/22/2011 3:51:23 PM
I agree with half of the above posts.
11/22/2011 3:55:57 PM
People don't pay their bills because they don't have money. How can insurers pay for all the health insurance if only 5% pay their bills. IT JUST DOESN'T ADD UP.This leads us back to occupy wallstreet. Who owns the quantity of money. Why do they have it?What are they doing with it?When will we see it?There's $14 trillion dollars out there, yet everyone is broke.
11/22/2011 4:02:39 PM
11/22/2011 4:14:27 PM
11/22/2011 4:17:46 PM
You can lead a horse to water....It's common sense not to spend more than you make, or if you're in debt don't buy fancy electronics. Yes I don't expect an average person to figure out mutual funds, roth ira's, etc by themselves, however, many banks offer these services for free! Banks are the enemy, I went to my bank a couple years ago and asked for help saving money, coming up with a plan etc and they went above and beyond to help me meet my goals.
11/22/2011 4:21:39 PM
11/22/2011 4:22:08 PM
common sense is not always common when the common person doesn't have sense.
11/22/2011 4:22:13 PM
So are you saying we (as a nation, world, etc) need to sit down with people and say "Hey, I notice you got some credit card debt there, how about paying that off first and put that brand new iphone 4s down"...I'm willing to bet if you have to tell someone that, they're not going to listen.
11/22/2011 4:24:17 PM
11/22/2011 4:25:43 PM
11/22/2011 4:29:30 PM
You can try to teach people that all you want, doesn't mean they're going to listen. My bank has helped me save a decent amount for retirement / savings, I'm not seeing how banks are the enemies. I'm not a fan of credit cards, so I don't have one so can't really attest to them 'being evil'Basic fiscal responsibility is common sense, even if it wasn', how about all the banks pay for INDEPENDENT financial specialists to led seminars and classes for free for everyone who wants them...would that make you happy? Or do we need to hit a reset button on debt, give those lessons, and then call it good?
11/22/2011 4:35:51 PM
i say we take it a step further and not just make all college 100% free, but also make mandatoryyay high school part 2.. weeee!!!
11/22/2011 4:36:39 PM
11/22/2011 4:38:14 PM
you can go ahead and take the room & board off that calculation. last time i checked living on campus wasn't required for a college degree.and, the path of least money resistance would to attend community college for 2 years then transfer.[Edited on November 22, 2011 at 4:43 PM. Reason : .]
11/22/2011 4:42:36 PM
So what you're saying is "I can't justify anything I'm saying, so I'm going to make you try to do it for me"
11/22/2011 4:43:38 PM
I'm saying, stop being lazy and sloppy. You aren't even trying to educate yourself.You isolate yourself from the problem and say "i don't see what's so bad about them"[Edited on November 22, 2011 at 4:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/22/2011 4:46:08 PM