Inqui
Pro Bowler
The student loan system I mentioned is essentially how it works over here, but a lot of other countries do similar stuff (inb4 talk of illegals, to get a loan you have to have an Inland Revenue number and be a demonstrated citizen) so you can look at the fiscal reports for basically any developed economy in the world to get an idea of what I'm taking about and whether/how they work. They're not usually an outrageous part of the budget and once the individual finishes their studies they go on the books as a state asset (since they're about to start paying more in tax).I am sure there are plenty of plans being talked about but what are the details of these plans? What are these new plans you are talking about and again what are the details?
Where did you see the details of Hillary's plan? Where can I see these independent estimates that project a surplus?
That sounds too good to be true.
I embedded links in my last paragraph, which I've been doing throughout this thread so I should probably start underlining them or something.
https://www.hillaryclinton.com/issues/college/
http://www.crfb.org/blogs/clintons-college-affordability-proposal-explained
The CRFB is a non-partisan think-tank with a petty good mix of Ds, Rs and Is on the board with experience in both the public and private sectors. And the research it cites is from the Tax Policy Center's (another non-partisan think-tank that tends to lean fiscally conservative imo) analysis of Hillary's proposal to close Wall Street loopholes. That article also has plenty of links to what Obama proposed if you're interested in delving deeper than what the mainstream media usually covers.
New Zealand, and here's the cliff notes of the latest budget. That $9.2bn in student loans goes back more than a decade. But even if they were all paid for this year (instead of over the decade) it wouldn't crack the top five expenditures for the year. That model just works off what the UK and Australia do, and it's not difficult to find similar policies in Europe.