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by HarryHirsch
5053 days ago
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Kaplan's default rate is 17 %, Phoenix' is 13 %. If that is any guide, spending any money on that kind of school is a bad investment. For comparison, the default rate at public universities is 6 % and at private ones it's 4 %. (There are reputable for-profit colleges with default rates less than 5 %, so this isn't painting with a broad brush.) Student loans need to be dischargeable in bankruptcy, because the only reason a bank lends to students at those places is that the creditor is backed by the law as it is currently written. If it were different the students would go elsewhere, the banks would have to find someone more profitable to lend to, and Kaplan-Phoenix-Devry would go out of business as it ought to. Society in general would be served better. Training in the trades is a different issue. In other countries (Germany comes to mind) this is done by the employer, and it works well for them. |
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There are lots of public schools with much higher drop-out rates. Maybe those folks don't go into default, but they're still paying for an education that they didn't get.
> Training in the trades is a different issue.
Nice duck, but until there's another mechanism for training tradesfolk exists, it is insane to destroy the one that we have.
And, I'll bet that German employers rely on outsiders to do the training. Either that, or the training is useless outside the employer. While employers may like the latter, it's a bad idea.
If German employers use outsiders, we're just quibbling about who signs the checks, not who actually pays.