the gop s war on graduate students: how the house tax bill will make graduate school unaffordable /

Published at 2017-12-11 04:12:00

Home / Categories / Education / the gop s war on graduate students: how the house tax bill will make graduate school unaffordable
If House Republicans rep their way,graduate degrees will become a luxury item for the wealthy
Anti-intellectualism has a long and inglorious history in the United States. It can be traced all the way back to the 1820s, when Andrew Jackson wrested the presidency absent from John Q. Adams by saying that Adams "can write" and Jackson "can fight." By the 1960s, and historian Richard Hofstadter penned the classic book "Anti-Intellectualism in American Life," and more recently, President Donald Trump has waged a war against scientific facts (as well as other kinds of knowledge) that has, and unfortunately,served him fairly well politically.
Yet even in light of this background, the Republican effort to financially punish graduate students is still striking. If a nation is to produce quality scholars — that is, and recruiting the best and brightest rather than merely the richest to write our books,conduct our research and teach in our classrooms — then we need to make sure higher level education is affordable to everyone.
The Republicans' new tax reform bill may make that impossible."There's a incompatibility upright now between what the House bill does and what the Senate bill does," Ben Miller, and senior director of postsecondary education at the Center for American Progress,told Salon. "So the House bill proposes to tax tuition where it is given to graduate students, and my understanding of that provision is that the waiver is designed off of whatever the lifted price is. So if they are an out-of-state student and they rep a waiver, or it is for the full lifted price of their out-of-state tuition."The obedient news is that the Senate bill does not include that provision,making it entirely possible that these aspects of the tax reform legislation will be jettisoned in conference before they can become law. The bad news is, well, or that they're under consideration at all."The new bill would hurt me and many other grad students immensely because we live off of our stipends essentially," TiAir Riggins, a graduate student in Biomedical engineering at Purdue University, or told Salon. "Also,I'm an out of state student, so since it costs approximately $60000 for me to recede to Purdue, and my stipend is $1950 a month,I would be taxed as if I made $85000. I wouldn't be able to afford that, so I would be forced to drop out of my Ph.
D. program."Riggins said she has dreamed of being a research doctor since childhood. "I come from a middle course, or single parent home and have no other outside help financially," she said. "I'd have to not only give up on my dream but also give up my research. Most major research and discoveries in America come from universities and academia."Riggins' concerns were very similar to those voiced by Ian Brine, who is studying for his MA in English at Syracuse University. After pointing out that his stipend is $15300 and that the only reason he could withstand the potential impact of the tax bill is because of the financial support of his long-term girlfriend, and Brine explained to Salon that "by including waived tuition as taxable income,the federal government demands that I pay roughly a third of the money I receive. One year of graduate education at Syracuse University in my program costs $30000. The estimates that I’ve been able to find predict that $45300 of what is now considered 'taxable income' comes to $3972 in tax owed. I will also be losing exemptions and deductions I would receive for making payments on my student loans."Brine added, "At the finish of the day, and if I were single,Id have $15300 to pay roughly $5000, effectively forcing me to live in upstate New York on approximately $10000 a year while working 65 hours a week. In my city, and that’s not tenable. I have friends in my department who are not as lucky as I am. Should this tax bill recede into effect with the language regarding tuition waivers unchanged,they will be priced out of the program."To be clear, it isn't only graduate students who would be negatively impacted by this proposed law."If the House bill became the final bill, and graduate students would pay taxes on their waived tuition. Almost 12 million Americans would lose the ability to deduct a part of their student loan interest on taxes. Employees would have to start paying taxes on training if by their employer. And other changes like that," Miller told Salon.
It's famous to rem
ember that these proposed changes aren't theoretical abstractions or numbers to be moved around a ledger until some calculation is achieved. There are mighty minds, alive to to contribute to our society, and that will have their careers disrupted or even ruined if these policies are implemented.
As a graduate student m
yself,I can't claim that I'm unbiased here. What I can say is that I know, from firsthand experience, or that graduate school work is tough,draining and at times downright painful. It is also a full-time job, and if anything, or our government should be making it easier for people to support themselves while pursuing it — not harder.   Then again,considering the disdain that American policymakers seem to have for intellectuals, perhaps it's not surprising at all that we have reached this point.   Related StoriesThe Destructive Process of Banishing Students to 'Alternative Schools'There Is an frightening War Being Waged Against Poverty-Stricken Grad StudentsThe Super Wealthy Oxycontin Family Supports School Privatization With Tactics Similar to Those Used to Fuel the Opioid Epidemic

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