
The Chicago Tribune just published an analysis of Hillary’s plan that is rather similar to mine. Their conclusions? Well, the editorial is titled “Clinton’s baby boondoggle” for a reason…
It would be expensive — about $20 billion a year — and Clinton offered no way to pay for it. Absent a funding source, the cost would simply be piled on to the existing federal budget deficit, which is another way of saying it would be paid for by future taxpayers.
And:
If a President Clinton were to pursue the idea, citizens might notice another shortcoming: The baby bond wouldn’t go very far toward paying for college. Assuming it earns 5 percent interest, it would add up to only about $13,000 18 years later. That’s barely enough to cover a year’s expenses at a typical public university even today. So it’s safe to bet that in the legislative process, the amount of the original payment — and the ultimate cost — would be bid up considerably. If $5,000 is good, wouldn’t $10,000 be twice as good?
Finally, the spot-on coup de grâce:
But this risk that doesn’t seem to worry Clinton, who knows that handing out goodies is a time-tested way to ingratiate yourself with voters. Her suggestion brings to mind the comment of the 19th Century French economist Frederic Bastiat: “The state is the great fiction by which everybody seeks to live at the expense of everybody else.” In the end, as the purported beneficiaries of her proposal would eventually find out to their sorrow, nothing comes for free.
h/t memeorandum










What a surprise, a FOX newspaper doesn’t like a Clinton plan!
hah! But what they forgot, Marc, is that Clinton will make it much cheaper to go to University. For this program, she’ll ‘celebrate’ every new student by giving them $10,000… a year.
Kip: that’s certainly no surprise, but I’m no Fox person and I don’t think the plan’s good either. In fact, I think it’s a great example of wasting money.
Which was why it was particularly ironic when some pundit or other chose to frame this in terms of the personal allocation of the national debt, as in “every citizen now owes $27,000, so why not give kids the $5000″. H/T to Tully, I think it was, over at Stubborn Facts, who answered that with, “Um, because then they’d each owe $32,000?”
LOL
20 billion?! That’s an increase of 0.73% or something! That’s like *three weeks* of the most wasteful military operation since… Um.