Earlier today, I posted a lighthearted comment about the
reappearance of the word “socialism” in mainstream discourse. I alluded to several of the most popular
proposals grouped under that heading – universal health care, etc. – but purposely
omitted free college, so that I could say something more serious about that a
bit later. Herewith that more serious
comment.
Free public education is a form of social investment [I am
here once again drawing on the insights of James O’Connor’s 1976 work The Fiscal Crisis of the State.] Literacy and math skills are required by the
workers in all but the most elementary production processes. In a capitalist economy, making them available
to children and young adults at state expense is a way of socializing what
would otherwise be capitalist expenses. Since the schooling is paid for by taxes, it
is in effect a socially invisible way of lowering wages.
In nineteenth century America, grade school literacy was
adequate for all but a very small fraction of the labor force. Many adults in the early years of the 20th
century did not have a high school education. The father of my first wife, for example,
never finished high school, and yet ended his work life as a Vice President of
Sears Roebuck. In the first half of the
20th century a nationwide movement made free high school available,
and in cities like New York it was actually mandatory that students remain in
high school until age sixteen.
During this time, going to college was extremely rare in
America. As I have noted here before,
when I applied to colleges in the fall of 1949, only about 5% of adults had
college degrees – so unusual was it to go on to college from high school that
in New York City students entered and exited the el-hi system twice a year, in
January and June, depending on their birthday.
As a December baby, I was slated to graduate from high school in
January, and had I not accelerated, I would have had to wait six months before
going to college.
But the transformation of the American economy made college
level skills more and more necessary for the productive operation of capitalist
enterprises, and by the 1950’s, public colleges and state university campuses
were expanding rapidly. They were rarely
free, of course, although when my father went to City College in New York all
the way back in 1919, it was free. But
even Harvard in 1950 charged the equivalent of only $6000 tuition in 2019
dollars. Many state universities were
much cheaper than that.
The explosion in the cost of a college education occurred in
the aftermath of the Viet Nam War, and though I have no evidence to support my
belief, I am convinced that the latent function of the soaring college costs
was to burden young college graduates with a more or less permanent debt that
made it impossible for them to do rebellious, countercultural, politically
unsettling things. The debt not only effectively
lowered their wages but also made them behave themselves.
The “socialist” demand for free college is neither pie in
the sky nor truly radical. It is one
more effort to socialize the costs of capital.
Inevitably, the cost will come out of the wages of labor. But because the proposal comes at a time when
the college graduate cohort – roughly 35% of the adult population these days –
has been given a life sentence in a no-walls debtor’s prison, it feels
liberatory.
The explosion in the cost of college, by the way, is traceable
to the unconscionable bloating of the non-educational departments of the
college or university, but that is the subject for another post.
Even besides the fact that skills learned in the university are more and more necessary for a highly technological economy, why not give everyone the chance to study and read all the works of philosophy and literature that most of us who comment on this blog enjoy so much?
ReplyDeleteMaybe reading them makes you a better person and a citizen, maybe not, but finally, in such a rich country as the U.S. there is enough money to pay for a university education for everyone. It seems to me that higher education, the chance to participate in the "highest" cultural achievements of humanity, is a basic human right today. I wouldn't claim that the unexamined life is not worth living, but I would say that the examined life is worth living and that everyone should have the opportunity to lead it and that a university education can and does serve as an introduction to the examined life for many people.
The state offsetting the costs of college was normal in the New Deal / Keynesian / welfare state version of capitalism. But under-funding colleges (and attacking "tenured radicals") became part and parcel of the neoliberal assault on public goods (and besides, debt would start to become big business for the newly deregulated financial sector), and it got a big boost from, of course, Reagan.
ReplyDeleteDevin Fergus has done some good work analyzing the way the Reagan administration successfully undermined a decades-old bipartisan consensus that adequately funding universities college was a no-brainer: After all, college graduates were future employees and future tax payers.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/09/02/my-students-pay-too-much-for-college-blame-reagan/?noredirect=on
Speaking of free college: https://www.insidehighered.com/admissions/article/2019/03/12/dozens-indicted-alleged-massive-case-admissions-fraud
ReplyDeleteShould h/t Brian Leiter for link above.
ReplyDelete