In this case, government intervention is what caused the problem, and removing that intervention is what would disrupt the multi-million dollar industry.
Specifically, the government made it so college loans can't be discharged in bankruptcy, and backs many student loans.
The solution is to remove the exception for student debt in bankruptcy, and either have the government stop backing student loans, or make stricter requirements for colleges to quailify for its students qualifying for federal loans. Like say, require that a certain percentage of students graduate, and get jobs within a year of graduating, having reasonable tuition, etc.
Agree, but the result will be that far fewer kids get to go to college, or get to go to the best college that they can get into.
Loans will only be granted to students who have a track record of high achievement, parents willing to co-sign, and going into majors that make economic sense.
Enrollment will drop, universities will stop offering passion majors, mass layoffs in library science, academia, and college administrations (likely to the tune of 1M+ people).
In the end, students will be told by federal examination which school and major they get to pursue, or whether they get to go to college at all.
That's assuming the government is both effective and efficient in this process.
This is essentially how most consumer economics work.
But isn't it the goal? To make sure only the kids who have the brains and the right class to make value out of a degree (or don't care about value because their parents have cash), will go to study, not "just about everyone" as now. Working class kids without outstanding abilities should go to trade schools/apprenticeships and do blue collar labor. It pays decent bucks, and brings value to society too.
I think therec would also need to be a cultural shift to make trade schools and apprenticeships more acceptable, and make financial assistance for them more accessible.
And for that matter, I think it could make since to have trade schools for white colllar jobs too. In some sense that is what coding camps are, although I'd like to see them be a little more rigorous and include things like security, software design, algorithms, etc.
As for passion subjects and arts, maybe have more, and higher quality community classes available that people can go to when they already have a decent job and can pay for them outright instead of accruing massive debt.
Specifically, the government made it so college loans can't be discharged in bankruptcy, and backs many student loans.
The solution is to remove the exception for student debt in bankruptcy, and either have the government stop backing student loans, or make stricter requirements for colleges to quailify for its students qualifying for federal loans. Like say, require that a certain percentage of students graduate, and get jobs within a year of graduating, having reasonable tuition, etc.