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Everybody vaguely familiar with basic economic concepts knows that there’s no such thing as a free lunch. It’s a great phrase and speaks to the principles of both opportunity cost and scarcity. That said, a “free lunch” refers to more than your afternoon repast. Everything costs something. And if you end up paying zero dollars for it, that only means it was paid for by someone else. This holds true for college tuition. It may cost a student zero dollars, and that student will certainly benefit from not having to pay for higher education herself, but what’s really been done is shifting the cost from the student—who is actually using the service—to the taxpayers—who certainly aren’t. So while there’s certainly a big problem with student debt in America, the solution isn’t “free” tuition. Join Antony Davies and James Harrigan as they get deep in the weeds about college tuition and more on this week’s episode of Words and Numbers.
Show Notes:
11 year old hacker changes election results
California law would prohibit restaurants from listing soft drinks on menus
Foolishness of the Week
Cops taser 87 year-old woman
Topic of the Week: Public policy and financing higher education
Tuition discounting
Financing college through equity instead of debt
Student loan data
Join the Conversation
Antony Davies on Twitter
James R. Harrigan on Twitter
Words & Numbers Backstage
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By CiVL4.8
357357 ratings
Everybody vaguely familiar with basic economic concepts knows that there’s no such thing as a free lunch. It’s a great phrase and speaks to the principles of both opportunity cost and scarcity. That said, a “free lunch” refers to more than your afternoon repast. Everything costs something. And if you end up paying zero dollars for it, that only means it was paid for by someone else. This holds true for college tuition. It may cost a student zero dollars, and that student will certainly benefit from not having to pay for higher education herself, but what’s really been done is shifting the cost from the student—who is actually using the service—to the taxpayers—who certainly aren’t. So while there’s certainly a big problem with student debt in America, the solution isn’t “free” tuition. Join Antony Davies and James Harrigan as they get deep in the weeds about college tuition and more on this week’s episode of Words and Numbers.
Show Notes:
11 year old hacker changes election results
California law would prohibit restaurants from listing soft drinks on menus
Foolishness of the Week
Cops taser 87 year-old woman
Topic of the Week: Public policy and financing higher education
Tuition discounting
Financing college through equity instead of debt
Student loan data
Join the Conversation
Antony Davies on Twitter
James R. Harrigan on Twitter
Words & Numbers Backstage
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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