A Desperate Measure for Desperate Times
Barbara Dudley, Portland State University
The plan calls for a pilot program to be ready by 2015; but for students graduating with a mountain of debt and weak job prospects, it can't come soon enough.
Don't Penalize Industrious Students
Joe Mihalic, blogger and author
Instead, we might want to reevaluate professor salaries, the necessity of luxury college rec centers and the purpose of billion-dollar endowment funds.
It Fails to Provide for Those Most in Need
Michelle Asha Cooper, Institute for Higher Education Policy
This supposedly "debt-free" plan only covers tuition and fees, which is less than half of the costs most students incur while in college.
Give It a Profit Motive
Andrew J. Coulson, Cato Institute
Unless the Oregon plan opts for a marketplace with incentives, checks, and balances, it is apt to disappoint.
It Could Work With Some Adjustments
Richard Vedder, Center for College Affordability and Productivity
The cost of college is rising faster than earnings of graduates. No financial scheme can overcome the reality that this is not an economically sustainable long-term trend.
What's Best Isn't Always Clear
William Darity Jr. and Rhonda V. Sharpe, Duke University
With no predetermined amount for repayment a student could not make an informed decision about whether it is better than a traditional loan.
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