College Bubble Set to Burst in 2011
The National Inflation Association  believes that the United States has a college education bubble that is  set to burst beginning in mid-2011. This bursting bubble will have  effects that are even more far-reaching than the bursting of the Real  Estate bubble in 2006. College education could possibly be the largest  scam in U.S. history.
NIA's advice to the youth of America  today is to think for yourselves. Don't get suckered into overpaying for  a college degree that is worthless because everyone else has one.  College is only worth attending if you plan on actually learning  something there. If you are only going to college because you think a  piece of paper is going to help you find a job, you would be much better  off skipping college and entering the workforce right now at any entry  level job. Your experience will benefit you more than any piece of  paper.
The median U.S. home price is currently  $170,600, down 26% from its peak of $230,200 in July of 2006. The Dow  Jones is currently 11,672, down 18% from its peak of 14,198 in October  of 2007. Oil is currently $91 per barrel, down 38% from its peak of $147  per barrel in July of 2008. After the financial panic of 2008, the U.S.  saw a collapse in the prices of just about all assets, goods, services,  and commodities. Between lost stock market and home equity wealth,  Americans lost $10.2 trillion in paper wealth in 2008, and have only  recouped a fraction of it since then.
College is the only thing in America  that never declined in price during the panic of 2008. It actually rose  in price substantially. The annual tuition for a private four-year  college was $21,235 in the 2005-2006 school year. Despite Real Estate  beginning to collapse in late-2006, college tuition rose by 4.6% in the  2006-2007 school year to $22,218. Despite the stock market beginning to  collapse in late-2007, college tuition rose by 6.7% in the 2007-2008  school year to $23,712. Despite oil and other commodities collapsing in  late-2008, college tuition rose by 6.2% in the 2008-2009 school year to  $25,177. Even after the Dow Jones crashed to a low in early-2009 of  6,469, college tuition still rose by 4.4% in the 2009-2010 school year  to $26,273.
Annual tuition for a private four-year  college in America is now $27,293, up 29% from five years ago.  Meanwhile, the employment situation in the U.S. has deteriorated. There  are currently 130.7 million non-farm jobs in America, down 3% from 134.5  million U.S. non-farm jobs in December 2005. 3.8 million jobs have been  lost, while the U.S. population has grown by approximately 14 million  people during the same time period. We would need to have seen the  creation of 6.7 million non-farm jobs just to stay even, but now we are  10.5 million jobs short.
All across America, thousands of  students are graduating law school each year with $250,000 in debt, but  with no jobs at law firms available to them. 15,000 attorney and legal  staff jobs have disappeared since 2008, yet 43,000 law degrees are being  handed out each year. Law degrees are losing their value faster than  the U.S. dollar is losing its purchasing power. Lawyers are  non-producing workers that do nothing to create any real wealth for  society. The artificially high incomes of lawyers are made possible  entirely by inflation, which steals the wealth from hard working goods  producing middle-class Americans and transfers it to those who add no  real value to society.
The service sector currently makes up  76.9% of the U.S. GDP. Agriculture, which in 1933 made up 28% of GDP,  currently makes up only 1.2% of GDP. The wealth of any country is  primarily created at first from the production of food, oil, and  precious metals. Secondly, wealth is created from the manufacturing of  real consumer goods. After a country generates wealth by producing real  things and builds a large domestic pool of savings, it can begin growing  a service based economy, just so long as it has enough savings to  support it.
During the past decade, an  unprecedented number of Americans went to school to become lawyers,  because they thought if they became a lawyer they would immediately  become rich. 60% of the U.S. Senate and 37% of the House of  Representatives are lawyers. The reason we have so many lawyers in  Washington is so that they can pass as many new harmful laws and  regulations as possible, in order to provide enough work for all of  their lawyer friends. All of the needless legislation that is passed  each year in order to provide work for lawyers, has the devastating  unintended consequence of destroying what little is left of the free  market. Small businesses are the backbone of the U.S. economy, but it is  now nearly impossible for a small businessman with limited financial  resources to build a large successful corporation in any sector, because  their legal costs would eat up all of their profits.
Many law students got suckered into  going to law school due to deceptive marketing practices. Some law  schools are advertising that 90% of graduates are employed within one  year of graduating. Sure, maybe 90% of law school graduates were  employed a year later, with half of them working at McDonald's, but no  law school degree is required for that. Schools are using dozens of  unethical tactics to manipulate their numbers while encouraging alumni  to falsify the surveys they fill out about their employment situation.  Just like we are now seeing countless class action lawsuits against  mortgage companies that misled customers about the loans they signed up  for, we will soon see a massive number of lawsuits filed against  colleges that lied about their job placement rates and average starting  salaries of graduates. (At least there will be some work for law school  graduates.)
Most Americans today are sheep who  believe that the key to success and happiness in life is following the  same career paths as everybody else. While everybody went to school to  become a lawyer, nobody went to school to become a farmer because  Americans didn't see any money in farming. With prices of nearly all  agricultural commodities soaring through the roof in 2010 and with NIA  expecting this trend to continue throughout 2011, the few new farmers  out there are going to become rich while lawyers are standing at street  corners with cups begging for money.
The college tuition bubble has been  fueled by the U.S. government's willingness to give out easy student  loans to anybody who applies for them. If it wasn't for government  student loans, the free market would force colleges to provide the best  quality education at the lowest possible price. By the government trying  to make colleges more affordable, they have actually driven prices  through the roof. Colleges have been encouraged to spend recklessly on  wasteful construction projects, building new libraries, gyms, sports  arenas, housing units, etc. Colleges spent $10.7 billion on construction  projects in 2009. Although this is down from an average of $14.7  billion per year colleges spent on construction projects from 2005 to  2007, colleges are still struggling to pay off their old construction  related debt. When interest rates start to rise, it will add further  upside pressure to college tuition prices.
College students borrowed $106 billion  in total student loans for the 2009-2010 school year, up from $96  billion in 2008-2009, $94 billion in 2007-2008, $87 billion in  2006-2007, and $83 billion in 2005-2006. Total student loan debt in the  U.S. currently stands at $830 billion and now exceeds credit card debt.  President Obama's new student loan bill that was passed last year now  makes the government the primary lender to students. By taking the free  market out of the student loan business and allowing students to receive  loans from the government at artificially low interest rates, colleges  will be encouraged to spend more recklessly than ever. None of this  wasteful spending is doing anything to improve the quality of education  in America.
Over a year ago when NIA was filming  'The Dollar Bubble' in Los Angeles, violent riots broke out at UCLA over  a 32% increase in college tuitions (from $7,788 to $10,302). We went to  the protest in order to video tape the shocking footage to show you.  While we were there we remember thinking to ourselves, why on earth are  these students protesting at all? If tuitions are rising by 32% and they  are unhappy about it, why don't they quietly and peacefully enroll  someplace else for college next semester. If not enough students enroll  into UCLA, the university will be forced to either dramatically cut  their costs or shut down. UCLA decided to completely ignore the riots  and went ahead with the 32% rise in tuitions. Did the students decide to  enroll someplace else? Nope, most of them simply took out larger  student loans and went back to UCLA. In fact, UCLA reported that they  received a record amount of freshman applicants for the next semester.
With all of the technological  advancements taking place around the world today, the cost for a college  education should be getting cheaper. Americans today can purchase just  about any type of product they want over the Internet for substantially  less than they can find it in a retail store. When the U.S. dollar  collapses and the college bubble bursts, NIA predicts we will see a boom  in online education where Americans take all of their courses over the  Internet from the comfort of their own home at a fraction of the cost of  traditional college.
Later this year, NIA is going to be  producing a documentary about America's college education crisis and the  college tuition bubble that is about to burst. In the weeks ahead, NIA  is going to begin searching for people who deserve to be featured in our  documentary. If you are a college student, a recent college graduate,  or a current or ex-college professor with an extremely shocking,  interesting, and important story that the whole world needs to know  about in what will be the most viewed college documentary in world  history, please send an email to collegebubble@inflation.us.  We would also love to hear from any NIA member who has any ideas of  topics that we should cover in this new documentary. Please send all  ideas and suggestions to collegebubble@inflation.us.
This will truly be one of the most  important documentaries NIA has ever produced. We need to change the  mindset in America that only those with college degrees have any chance  of becoming successful. Americans have become so brainwashed that even  after graduating college with over $50,000 in debt and not being able to  find a job, many of them are wasting even more years of their life and  getting even deeper into debt to attend a graduate school, for a  master's degree that is just as worthless as a bachelor's degree. It is  like comparing a $10 bill (master's degree) to a $1 bill (bachelor's  degree), they are both worthless pieces of paper with no intrinsic  value.
NIA believes that any recent high  school graduate with $30,000 saved for college who invests that money  into silver and becomes a minimum wage apprentice for the next 4 years,  will likely have enough money in 4 years to buy a median priced U.S.  home. Not only that, but they will have work place experience that is  far more valuable than the worthless college degrees of any of their  friends. We must work hard to educate America to the truth if our  country is going to have the wherewithal to survive the upcoming  bursting college bubble and Hyperinflationary Great Depression.
It is important to spread the word  about NIA to as many people as possible, as quickly as possible, if you  want America to survive hyperinflation. Please tell everybody you know  to become members of NIA for free immediately at: http://inflation.us
 
 
I would love to see the college tuition bubble burst, however the only way I see that happening is if the federal government stops back-stopping student loans and/or if student loans are dischargable in bankruptcy.
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