Originally posted by: tk149
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Since the government can always borrow more cheaply than banks, the fact that the government is using its money instead of the bank's money is irrelevant. (in fact is a source of additional savings)
Please explain, because this makes no sense to me at all. The government can borrow more cheaply than banks, but the interest paid by the government is directly passed on to the taxpayer, whereas the interest paid by a bank is not. How is this a cost savings to you and me?
For this to be relevant, you would have to assume that the student loan industry produces a net loss
So yes, the government will have to hire more people to handle this. I really fail to see why it's a growth of government though, considering the banks were merely acting as subcontractors for the government anyway.
"Subcontractor" <> government. Government does not have the same incentives to be efficient as private business.
...and private business does not have the same incentives to serve their customers
Banks were able to give loans to people using the explicit backing of the government at zero risk to themselves, it's the very definition of corporate welfare. It's as much a 'shrinking of private industry' as cutting the welfare rolls would be considered cutting private employment.
Regardless of one's opinion of the current system, it is true that, if passed, this bill WILL cause private lenders to cut staff. That is, by definition, a shrinking of private industry. There will be a consequent increase in government staff to compensate. That is, by definition, growing government.
In hard economic times, shrinking private industry and growing government has a pretty bad track record for encouraging growth.
By the way, there is some risk involved in student loans, but I won't go into that here because it's beyond the scope of this discussion.
It's shrinking (more accurately, returning to parity) a private industry that was artificially inflated through government subsidy to start with.