At $1.2 trillion student debt, we may only be 60 percent along
the way, but rest assured that it won’t take but 3 to 5 years before this
spectacular bubble bursts... and it will do so on the economic backs of
the poor, and the ghostly – ghastly might be more apropos – remnants of a fast
disappearing middle class.
Two weeks ago, while
doing a final screening of old papers kept for no-apparent good reason, I came
across a few notes from a graduate business course which I taught over three
decades ago. An underlined hyphenated-word stood in front of me teasing both my
memory and reason for its use: Porno-Economics.
Then, I quickly recalled that my reason for its use had absolutely nothing to do
with the economics of porn; and how I explained to my class – mostly graduate
engineers with families trying to attain an MBA attending evening classes to
improve their chance for career advancement – with my intended meaning appearing
in parenthesis in the notes: “worthless economic activity for
no other reason than to stimulate and fulfill greed.” It would be more
than a decade later that the true father of Porno-Economics, and Federal Reserve
Board chairman, Alan Greenspan, would show up (December 1996) with his
celebrated cute-ism of Irrational Exuberance… as prelude to the infamous Dot-com
bubble burst (1999-2001).
Politicians under our anarchical capitalist system either shrug off
their shoulders to the inevitability of economic cycles that citizens must
endure, or simply acknowledge a need for change, and often the establishment of
much needed controls. However, at the end of the day, both Republican
and Democratic politicians embrace the same laissez-faire attitude and leave the
doors wide open in our economy for anarchy to come in; after all, if we accept
Darwinism, and the idea of a predatory continuum in the animal species, why not
let the course of natural events reign over economics as well? Contrary to all
irrational promulgations by self-proclaimed spiritual prophets, the meek will
not inherit the earth... it will continue to stay in the hands of the ruling
class, the elite in possession of all wealth.
Whether Alan Greenspan at the helm, or his two
successors, Ben Bernanke (2006-2014), and Janet Yellen (currently), whatever
was/is their intent when establishing fiscal policy, the results have been, and
continue to be, the same: an accelerated redistribution of wealth from the poor and middle-class
to the wealthy elite; the last bubble to burst in real estate (2008)
shifting the wealth distribution in this nation to obscene extremes. Now we are
putting the final touches to the next entry in this bubbly parade: a $2 trillion
float (or rather, hearse) representing student loans unlikely to be repaid in
our existing Barbell Economy. And the moment of reckoning is just around the
corner…
We in the United States
are superbly entrepreneurial when it comes to Ponzi schemes or pseudo-economics
hocus-pocus in matters of greed. Needless-to-say, politicians in
America thrive at the prospect of simplistic answers solving society’s problems
with little or no effort required from them; and student loans, guaranteed by an
irresponsible government, have been a panacea for politicians hiding our
nation’s true level of unemployment, our flight of jobs overseas, and a
leadership throwing us to unplanned-globalization to be devoured by waiting
predatory international capitalist wolves.
“Go and get educated, you weakly fools, learn to compete; it’s a tough
world out there.” And with that push by the Knightly Elite, Americans
by the millions have entered a path offering them skills or greater opportunity,
instead of taking the alternate route to an almost guaranteed permanent
welfare. In their obsequious tradition of creating self-serving opportunities
and promoting waste, legislators have allowed the creation of a field of
uncontrolled helter-skelter, unqualified schools (new or existing) offering
shelter to mostly unemployed or unemployable men and women wearing student
uniforms. Yet, as this throw-away part of society gets
“educated” there are none-to-few jobs waiting for them. These “money advances,”
appear as the only way to subsist.
But if
these last three decades have proven to be the golden age for bureaucracy in our
traditional colleges and universities, creating inefficiencies parallel to those
rampant in military procurement, we have seen the advent of something even
worse: proliferation of presumed “learning centers” (trade schools,
‘colleges-universities’…) which for the most part (if not all!) have a selfish
mission, regardless of the PR-statement; and that is, questionable, unmerited
profits – for profit-making institutions; or undeserved benefits and
compensation to “principals” of non-profits. In either case, the resulting
ongoing scam, and the bubble thus created, will bury us deeper in debt.
And no, there appears to be no light
at the end of this corrupt-politicians’ tunnel.
What about all these certificates of completion,
bachelor degrees, masters and PhDs by the bushel... doesn’t that make us a more
educated, productive society? If such were only true! It would be
research-worthy and interesting to qualitatively measure the societal
capabilities of the average American with 14 years of education and the average
European/Asian counterpart with just 10. I have my own idea how the comparison
might go, and it’s not flattering to our investment skills in education.
For now... we’ll just wait until this
bubble bursts.
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