I knew long before I went to college that I would graduate with a large debt--doesn't everyone? However, knowing this fact is far different from living it. Despite the universal reality of student loans and the debt they represent, my experience at a wealthy private college completely changed my view of the debt problem. I used to accept debt as an unpleasant but not especially onerous reality. Now I realize the immensity of the student debt problem--a problem that threatens not only our already weakened economy but the future of the nation. Before he sets an agenda for the country, the next president needs to understand that student debt contributes more to the disparity between the wealthy and the middle and lower classes every day, and that this situation must be addressed.
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Ending Student Debt
Sean Dennison: This essay, a finalist in The Nation's Student Writing Contest, argues that the new president needs to take definitive action toward eliminating student debt.
We cannot allow our nation's colleges to cater exclusively to the rich while slowly edging out applicants from other socioeconomic classes. Private colleges trumpet their efforts to increase diversity, but these efforts usually involve piling large amounts of debt onto financial aid applicants. My school claims to meet "all the financial needs" of students who can't afford the $50,000 fee; my financial needs (and those of most other scholarship students) were met with a sizable grant but also with a considerable loan component. Loans, whatever else they may be, are not an acceptable form of paying for college. Calling loans financial aid is laughable, as loans are undermining the already weakened financial power of the middle and lower classes. Graduating with debt that is likely to last for at least a decade has become the norm for most students who do not belong to the upper class--an unsettling fact in a country with a flagging economy brought on by Bush's unending campaign to consolidate the power of the wealthy. This trend must be stopped.
Having experienced this situation firsthand, I know that the vouchers touted by the presidential candidates will not be enough to solve the student debt crisis. As tuition and fees continue to rise steadily, vouchers will lose their worth. The next president must address this problem directly: the government needs to take definitive action toward eliminating student debt. If action is not taken, college debt will destroy the economic power of the middle and lower classes, leaving them in the hands of the wealthy.
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