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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
07.08.2008
Collateral Damage

There has been much collateral damage from the sub-prime crisis. And 
there is more in the offing. Much of this is just an outgrowth  of 
the banking profession's obsession with getting people into debt, even 
those who are unqualified...and the devil will pay. Some of this 
damage, however, is truly startling, its origins obscure and its 
repair elusive.

For ten days now, the Boston Globe has been full of articles on the financial collapse 
of the 26 year-old Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority which 
announced, deep in mid-summer and at the very dawn of return-to-school-
days, that it will not be able to provide anybody with any college 
loans this year. Deval Patrick, who became governor before the 
economic calamity that has hit the country was clearly seen ran on a 
winning spend-spend platform, has been heroically trying to save 
middle class and lower middle class students from the deeds of the 
financiers. But the fact is that the MEFA is down and out, without 
cash itself and without credit, too.

Quite naturally, the governor has been appealing to the state pension 
fund to invest in the student loan authority. But, I am afraid, this 
will only imperil the pensions of other workers down the line. The 
solution is obvious but it will not work.

The next obvious remedy was Harvard, and I don't know whether the 
President and Fellows of Harvard College will be able to protect Drew 
Faust from her and everybody else's instincts to put the university's 
endowment up for raking. Yes, Harvard is an extraordinarily rich 
institution, like Stanford and Princeton, Yale and Amherst (to pick on 
another Massachusetts institution). But its endowment also funds a 
diverse program of undergraduate study, graduate study in a hundred 
degrees, professional schools, research in the sciences, social 
sciences, humanities and as many cross-disciplinary fields that you or 
I could imagine.

It is especially onerous to burden Harvard and other such wealthy 
educational centers with the grim results of policies (both financial 
and academic) for which they had and have no responsibility. Why not 
burden Citigroup and Bear Stearns, Merrill and Lehman instead?  
These, after all, had more to do with the collapse of the market than 
the treasurer of Harvard College.
 

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 8:13 PM with 5 comment(s)

Comments

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teplukhin2you said:

"Why not burden Citigroup and Bear Stearns, Merrill and and Lehman instead?"

Silly Marty. There's next to no chance of this occurring so long as the party of reform has a candidate who counts these banks' officers among his close friends and key campaign supporters.

James Grant had it right. It's tails they win, heads we lose. And both parties have been bought off.

August 7, 2008 3:41 PM

rozenson said:

Doesn't Harvard hoard its endownment and spend like 2% of it a year? I don't really sympathize that much with them.

August 7, 2008 5:54 PM

CRS9TNR said:

Hey Marty, maybe Harvard Faculty and Media Barrons could help these poor students out.

A Faculty Pay cut of 5% would cover a lot of tuition.

August 7, 2008 8:31 PM

r-ennis said:

CRS9TNR, good point about college tuition. Cost of a college education has risen by a far higher percentage than the cost of gasoline. Maybe Obama should propose windfalls profits taxes on universities. Can we impose such a tax on "non-profits"?  

August 8, 2008 10:42 AM

The Spine said:

Joe Biden fits the ticket's requirements to a "T." I know that some people think he is

August 23, 2008 2:26 PM

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