I support making college free at the point of delivery and funding that by imposing an income tax on those that attend college. A lot of people don’t like doing that. I think they have pretty bad arguments for opposing it. I address some of those arguments, as detailed by Jordan Weissman in The Atlantic,… Continue reading Short responses to arguments regarding income-based repayment
The Atlantic: The 2 Supreme Court Cases That Could Put a Dagger in Organized Labor
I have a post up at the Atlantic. Check it out.
Policy Shop: The Distraction of Socioeconomic Diversity and Mop-Up-The-Disaster Policy
New post at Policy Shop. Excerpt: Like so much literature on the topic, the book sadly focuses exclusively on how to mop up a tiny bit of the disaster that is caused by enormous socioeconomic inequality. We have some of our country’s greatest minds and researchers trying to figure out how to slightly ameliorate the… Continue reading Policy Shop: The Distraction of Socioeconomic Diversity and Mop-Up-The-Disaster Policy
All aboard the amusing AFT contradiction train
Today, I was directed to this amusing paper from the American Federation of Teachers regarding something I’ve called universal income-based repayment. I am working on a longer piece to explain my position on this, but here I just want to pick out a handful of the truly strange points made by AFT. Before we start,… Continue reading All aboard the amusing AFT contradiction train
At this point, higher education debate is apparently about tax policy
I want to clarify and re-issue the challenge of my prior post. Imagine we have free higher education funded by a 3% income tax imposed upon everyone. This is apparently acceptable to the titans of free higher education on the internet. That is, higher education funded this way would qualify as sufficiently left-wing and decommodified… Continue reading At this point, higher education debate is apparently about tax policy