Sajay Samuel: How college loans exploit students for profit
Sajay Samuel: Hoe studieleningen studenten uitbuiten om winst te maken
Professor Sajay Samuel's proposal to reduce the burden of student loans is part of his larger preoccupation with thinking beyond the conventional categories of economics and ecology. Full bio
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for their passage to the new economy.
in de nieuwe economie.
more than one trillion US dollars.
waarvoor ze persoonlijk garant staan.
that is secured on their person.
een bankroete gokker een tweede kans.
gets a second chance.
voor een Amerikaan
their student loan debts.
kwijtgescholden te krijgen.
graduating with debt.
graduated from Colorado State University
[een studiebeurs voor veteranen]
gratis of bijna gratis.
as a public good.
from Colorado State University,
aan de universiteit van Colorado
by working part-time.
was affordable, reasonable,
het hoger onderwijs betaalbaar.
you paid off by graduation date.
loste je af na je studie.
trad in zijn voetsporen
has become unaffordable
is onbetaalbaar geworden
an expensive education
dat dit je oplevert.
that you earned from it.
meets the road.
earned 10 percent more in 2001
verdiende 10% meer in 2001 dan in 2013.
than a quarter of those who must
can be the best of times,
in ways that you can't ignore.
is a consumer product you can buy.
just as the economists do now,
zoals economen dat doen.
to improve the human stock
to sort and classify people
can hire them more easily.
ranks colleges
classificeren universiteiten
wasmachines beoordeelt.
rates washing machines.
and soccer and science,
alleen niet voor jullie.
maken winst op jouw studieschuld.
of the student loan industry.
of 1.2 billion dollars.
1.2 miljard dollar winst maakten.
and packaged and sliced and diced,
gesecuritiseerde leningen
met al die verdiensten
in the higher education business
that they pretend to educate?
die hun onderwijs zou moeten genezen?
of addiction and envy."
upgraded versions of an iPhone,
nieuwe versies van een iPhone
onderwijs worden aangesmeerd.
more and more education.
de nieuwe middelbare scholen,
on certifications and recertifications,
aangeprezen als statussymbool.
as a status object.
of a Louis Vuitton bag,
of een Louis Vuitton-tas,
of envy of others.
hidden by a very noisy sales pitch.
on television telling us,
om de ladder op te klimmen
to a middle-class life."
is the college premium:
met het 'college premium':
56 percent more than a high school grad.
lijkt het in tegenspraak
als baristas en caissières.
working as baristas and cashiers.
in any form of post-secondary education,
including financial.
than high school grads,
dan afgestudeerde scholieren,
het extreem hoge collegeld
tijdens de studie?
for only those who complete it.
alleen lonend is
middelbare schoolsalarissen
have been cut to the bone,
tot op het bot uitgekleed zijn.
een middelbare schooldiploma
voor hetgeen ze geproduceerd hebben.
of what they have produced.
a bad investment for many.
een middelbare schoolkorting.
are not going to find an adequate job.
doesn't look particularly promising --
meedogenloze vormen van studieschuld.
about this college premium thing.
higher education as a consumer product?
elk ander consumptiegoed,
what you're paying for.
zou een waarschuwingsetiket moeten zitten
geïnformeerde keuzes te maken.
miles per gallon to expect.
per liter je kan verwachten.
to the expected income.
aan Inkomen-Gebaseerd Collegegeld.
from a given college and major.
en major vakkenpakket.
to the huckster's ploy,
of the additional income they earn?
to Income-Based Tuition.
to manage costs better,
the same tuition for every major.
hetzelfde bedrag.
and should change.
gebruikt meer middelen,
as a consequence,
goes on and earns more money.
buy the same product,
en dezelfde prijs betalen
half or a third of the service.
in bepaalde richtingen,
servicing their student debt,
when majors are priced more correctly.
correct geprijsd zijn.
door een openbare accountant
of Income-Based Tuition,
and the fact of financial ruin
that they really want to.
en met me samenwerken
students in America.
die in het krijt staan.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sajay Samuel - EducatorProfessor Sajay Samuel's proposal to reduce the burden of student loans is part of his larger preoccupation with thinking beyond the conventional categories of economics and ecology.
Why you should listen
Sajay Samuel is an award winning professor of accounting at the Smeal College of Business at Penn State University. He has organized seminars and lectured widely in Europe and elsewhere on a range of topics, including science and technology, the political economy of professions and decision theory.
Samuel received his Masters in Accounting and Ph.D in Business Administration from Penn State University in 1990 and 1995 respectively. Since then he has taught management accounting and related subjects to undergraduates, graduates, MBAs and Executives over assignments that included stints at Bucknell University and the University of Connecticut. He returned to Penn State in 2003 and now teaches a capstone course to all undergraduate business majors titled, "Business and Industry Analysis."
Samuel was awarded the 2006 Lester J. Shonto Faculty Award for Excellence in Accounting Education. Dr. Samuel's research has been published in such scholarly journals as Accounting, Organizations and Society, Administration Science Quarterly and Symbolic Interaction. His most recent work on accounting, technology and on the history of ideas, has appeared in three articles in the Encyclopedia of Science, Technology and Ethics (2005). His current research aims at clarifying the political implications of accounting practice. His studies in this area concern the political significance of administrative agencies and professional associations in liberal democratic polities. He has presented the early fruits of this work in France, Italy, Germany and England.
Sajay Samuel | Speaker | TED.com