A 2017 College Board study estimated that the cost of college has increased 100% since 2001. The St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank estimates that U.S. college tuition debt has increased from $480 billion in 2006 to $1.5 trillion in 2018. Several 2020 Democratic Presidential Primary candidates have argued that the cost of college is out of control and that the government should pay for tuition. Opponents argue that the government cant afford it and point to estimates from the Committee for a Responsible Federal budget that estimate programs would cost the government $80 billion a year.
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@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes, but only At public colleges and universities
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
No lower the tuition at public colleges and universities
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only for public college and don’t fund it through taxes
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only for public college and don’t pay for it through taxes
@88LK76J3yrs3Y
No and abolish public universities
@88LK76J3yrs3Y
No and defund public colleges
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only for public college and don’t fund it through taxes.
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only for partial tuition at public colleges and universities
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only at public colleges and universities and don’t fund it through taxes
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes, but only for partial tuition At public colleges and universities
@88LK76J3yrs3Y
Yes but only if they need it at public colleges
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes Public college should be free but not private
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
Yes but only for public college
@88LK76J4yrs4Y
No lower the cost of public college
@88LK76J5yrs5Y
Yes but only to those who need it at public colleges and universities
@36DLLNT4yrs4Y
Yes, but only after reworking the current budget to allocate funding to universal college.
@624Z7BS4yrs4Y
Yes (or heavily helped) after verification of research on pragmatic outcome of your chosen degree; no useless degrees and reduced compensation for extremely saturated degrees (liberal arts degrees).
@8PVYR474yrs4Y
No, instead provide incentives for colleges to use ISA loans.
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