I appreciate the very thoughtful replies to my postings.  My reply 
follows.

I'm not saying that  "_any_ form of federal, tax-payer support for access 
to higher education should be done away with," as Mark Laffey 
understands me to say.   As long as the economy has any need for 
additional people with certain kinds of professional skills, let there be 
federal, tax-payer support so that such people are trained.  All I'm 
objecting to is that working people with falling wages continue to be 
taxed to as to support the current charade wherein a _huge oversupply_ 
of college graduates, and people with more or less useless 
professional/technical credentials, are being cranked out.

If "many employers won't take someone without a college degree," what 
does that mean?   It means that they are using this bogus criterion as a 
rather arbitrary sorting mechanism, in order to choose from a huge 
oversupply of people who are all perfectly capable of doing the job!  
Remember, BLS says that 20% of all college grads are now working at 
jobs that don't really require a degree to perform well.  (These are jobs 
that have never required a degree, in years past.)  And in ten years that 
figure (20%) will jump by more than half, to 33%, says BLS, if current 
trends hold.  

Given these realities, how much sense does it make for tax-payers to 
spend many millions each year to assist mediocre college students to 
jump through the requisite hoops, so that employers can use this very 
arbitrary and obsolete sorting mechanism?   (Studies have shown that re: 
the vast majority of jobs that college grads take, IQ is a better predictor 
of job success than are academic credentials.  So why should employers 
be allowed use this demonstrably inferior---and, to the rest of us, very 
expensive---sorting mechanism?)

Contrary to Mark's suggestion, I am not casting aspersions about the 
"gullibility or crass materiality of these students."   I think the students 
are doing the best they can to keep from ending up in that group of 
laborers which American society is, increasingly, consigning to a sort of 
ThirdWorld-style underclass.   The problem here, is that young people 
have an increasingly irrational and increasingly unjust system within 
which to make their life decisions.  The median income of 18-24 yr olds 
has fallen by 50% in the last dozen years . . as the incomes of the top 2% 
have multiplied.   Many of the young people at the bottom are, quite 
understandably, desperate.  (Hence their growing rate of participation in 
crimes of violence, drug abuse, and suicide.)

For an answer, I'm afraid we'll have to look to Harvard professor of 
economics, Juliet Schor:  The only real solution to the problem is to 
redistribute the available work that needs to be done, so as to create more 
jobs of all kinds, at higher hourly rates of pay, with more leisure time for 
all workers.   As soon as sufficient numbers of non-college grads can 
again make decent wages, of the kind that will (again) allow them to buy 
a decent house and pay for health care---without man and wife 
working/commuting a total of 90+ hrs/wk---a lot of these kids will lose 
their incentive to waste our money jumping though hoops on college 
campuses.

Once again, if they want to go there to improve their minds, fine.  But 
not to jump through hoops created by Creeping Credentialism and the 
employers who buy into it.

BTW, there are lots of ways for people to improve their minds without 
going to a university and pursuing some cooked-up curriculum that's 
supposed to lead to some upper echelon position.

Patrick Mason points out that "the relative return of a college degree has 
been increasing since the early 1980s," as has the "differential" between 
college grads and non-grads.   Notice that this finding is entirely 
consistent with a scenario in which the incomes of the graduates of top 
universities have gone up at a very steep rate while the incomes of 
mediocre students from mediocre colleges and universities have 
foundered.  A sharp enough rise in the first group will more than offset 
the gradually falling wages of the second group.  Meanwhile, through no 
fault of their own, the incomes of blue collar workers have continued to 
slide---at least in America---as their productivity (the highest in the 
world) has continued to improve!

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