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Steve Olsher: College Is The Single Worst Investment A Parent Can Make

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The WTC bombing, the cluster fuck in Mogadishu, the cluster fuck in Waco, the embassy bombing, the Cole and the tech bubble and market crash. Good times I tell ya.

funny I don't remember US citizens blaming the POTUS when the hostage crisis was going on in Iran in the late 70's to early 80's..last time I checked the POTUS is not responsible for protecting every american and especially those outside of the US.

WTF did Clinton have to do with the tech bubble and market crash? how exactly is the POTUS responsible for over-speculation by investors? the tech bubble was not the result of lobbying as was seen in the banking collapse in 2007, as the reports from the IMF proved was the result of extensive lobbying by sub-prime lenders during the years of 2000-2007.
 
unfortunately with this kind of rhetoric many future scientists/ engineers won't go to college ( the underpinning of future innovation etc.). My sister went to college to be a history major,she took a lot of courses and realized she actually liked linguistics which segwayed into programming which led to software engineer. If she never went to college to broaden her horizons and find her skill she would be nowhere.


Those kids won't go to college because high tech fields are being outsourced to India and China where kids are placed on a specific track much earlier in their educational careers. America is quickly losing (some have said it's already gone to far) her ability to compete with China and India in training, recruiting and retaining high tech professions.

But hell...what do I know..."I pick things up and put them down".
 
My parents couldn't really help me out due to their own financial problems. For the first few years I basically went to school for two semesters, then worked construction for a semester. That was my only way to stay afloat and still have time to devote to the engineering program at South. Then I changed majors to CS, and the coarse load was easier, so I I worked 40 hours per week and took 12 hours of classes per week. I did that off and on for about 5 years until I graduated.

I do not recommend this method if you have other options. Doing it that way basically turned me into a bitter angry fuck, or at least more of a bitter angry fuck than I already was.

Also, I learned some pretty useful trades while I put myself through school which sort of backfired on me. I was making a very good living before I even graduated. As my income increased, so did my standard of living. This made it almost impossible to start entry at level into the field which I got my degree in. I basically had to work two jobs for a year and a half until I worked my way into an income bracket that would allow me to stay on top of my bills.

Long story short, just don't do it the way I did. I would give give my left nut to do it all over again knowing what I know now.

I've often wondered why you are always so angry!!! :roflmao:

The important thing is that you got it done.
 
i like cock! but in all seirousnt i dont care much about this im gettin my degree becuase i kinda like to learn and want to make some good money and hopefully my degrees will get me their. i also plan on joining the military so officers may should be decent especially if i can jump through the ranks =)

Writing basics 101: Spelling, Grammar & Punctuation would be a good start. :)
 
Writing basics 101: Spelling, Grammar & Punctuation would be a good start. :)
omg not anotha 1 of you guys who the fuck cares! :jerkit:
when im doin 1 of my reports or somethin that matters maybe ill try lil harda but im not here 4 a grade and i love how it geta yalls panties in a bunch ;):wacko:
 
omg not anotha 1 of you guys who the fuck cares! :jerkit:
when im doin 1 of my reports or somethin that matters maybe ill try lil harda but im not here 4 a grade and i love how it geta yalls panties in a bunch ;):wacko:

disappointed.jpg
 
Those kids won't go to college because high tech fields are being outsourced to India and China where kids are placed on a specific track much earlier in their educational careers. America is quickly losing (some have said it's already gone to far) her ability to compete with China and India in training, recruiting and retaining high tech professions.

But hell...what do I know..."I pick things up and put them down".

That may be true for I.T. but in basic sciences developing new products or drugs, As an ex- chemist, I can tell you I was highly valued because I was an American. I beat out M.I.T, Stanford, Harvard grads because the companies knew the value of an American researcher who was unlikely to engage coorporate espionage. I still get calls and letters begging me to return to American companies in need of good analytical chemists. I ask them why they don't just hire the Indian or Chinese with the credentials graduating from Georgia Tech, MIT etc. and they tell me #1, it costs more since they have to fund their H1B , J1 visas etc. and they are worried about coorporate espionage.......My brother in law makes a killing as a mathmatician for Bank of America and I ask him why they haven't outsourced his job to India where they are turning out mathmaticians by the drove, he can't tell me what he does but I get the feeling it's something similar, he just tells me they can't outsource his job.

We need to pay science and math teachers more than liberal arts teachers in the middle and high schools because there is such a shortage. That will get more people with talents or degrees in those fields teaching our kids . It's basic free market supply and demand. And, we need to reward scientists by either funding their college tuition, ( so a physicist isn't owing as much as a premed), and don't cut funding to the NIH and other government agencies that sponser basic research, we are cutting our jugular. Private coorporations have no idea the potential of basic research until much later ( look at quantum mechanics, esoteric in its infancy but it's application now dominates a major portion of our technology).
 
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That may be true for I.T. but in basic sciences developing new products or drugs, As an ex- chemist, I can tell you I was highly valued because I was an American. I beat out M.I.T, Stanford, Harvard grads because the companies knew the value of an American researcher who was unlikely to engage coorporate espionage. I still get calls and letters begging me to return to American companies in need of good analytical chemists. I ask them why they don't just hire the Indian or Chinese with the credentials graduating from Georgia Tech, MIT etc. and they tell me #1, it costs more since they have to fund their H1B , J1 visas etc. and they are worried about coorporate espionage.......My brother in law makes a killing as a mathmatician for Bank of America and I ask him why they haven't outsourced his job to India where they are turning out mathmaticians by the drove, he can't tell me what he does but I get the feeling it's something similar, he just tells me they can't outsource his job.

these are all the same reasons why the US lets many come to the US to work but is very selective in regards to "foreigners" that get secret security clearance and above. I mean it's not like the US has wronged any country's in the past or anything..lol
 
what's interesting is my dual citizenship ( china and u.s) made some people nervous since my home country use their scientists in espionage, ( I could be the perfect double agent) but my dad's connections with C.I.A.meant I was clean ( or at least they could check me out pretty thoroughly).
 
The WTC bombing, the cluster fuck in Mogadishu, the cluster fuck in Waco, the embassy bombing, the Cole and the tech bubble and market crash. Good times I tell ya.

Hey, we had a job :winkfinger:
 
Article out today. Just like the Stock market tech bubble and housing bubble - there is now a student loan (borrowing) bubble. Less money in total, but it will be damaging and has ripple effects.

With more than $1 trillion in student loans outstanding in this country, crippling debt is no longer confined to dropouts from for-profit colleges or graduate students who owe on many years of education, some of the overextended debtors in years past. Now nearly everyone pursuing a bachelor???s degree is borrowing. As prices soar, a college degree statistically remains a good lifetime investment, but it often comes with an unprecedented financial burden.

Ninety-four percent of students who earn a bachelor???s degree borrow to pay for higher education ??? up from 45 percent in 1993, according to an analysis by The New York Times of the latest data from the Department of Education. This includes loans from the federal government, private lenders and relatives.

And....
Mr. Date likened excessive student borrowing to risky mortgages. And as with the housing bubble before the economic collapse, the extraordinary growth in student loans has caught many by surprise. But its roots are in fact deep, and the cast of contributing characters ??? including college marketing officers, state lawmakers wielding a budget ax and wide-eyed students and families ??? has been enabled by a basic economic dynamic: an insatiable demand for a college education, at almost any price, and plenty of easy-to-secure loans, primarily from the federal government.

???If one is not thinking about where this is headed over the next two or three years, you are just completely missing the warning signs,??? said Rajeev V. Date, deputy director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the federal watchdog created after the financial crisis.


Entire article is worth a browse: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/13/b...ration-with-heavy-debt.html?_r=3&ref=business
 
Yes, tell your kids not to go to college so somebody can pick up my kids garbage.

the piece of shit politicians and lobbyists can't write legislation or "free trade agreements" to outsource those kinds of jobs, they will always be there.
 
Article out today. Just like the Stock market tech bubble and housing bubble - there is now a student loan (borrowing) bubble. Less money in total, but it will be damaging and has ripple effects.



And....


[/b]

Entire article is worth a browse: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/13/b...ration-with-heavy-debt.html?_r=3&ref=business

the same applies to health spending. if the US had cost controls like in most OECD country's those monies could be better used for consumption etc. this bullshit low wage economy fueled by debt based consumption for the working class that they have designed isn't going to last much longer, it's unsustainable.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/18/e...?_r=2&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120718

[h=1]Top Universities Test the Online Appeal of Free[/h][h=6]By RICHARD P?REZ-PE?A[/h]A few months ago, free online courses from prestigious universities were a rarity. Now, they are the cause for announcements every few weeks, as a field suddenly studded with big-name colleges and competing software platforms evolves with astonishing speed.

In a major development on Tuesday, a dozen highly ranked universities said they had signed on with Coursera, a new venture offering free classes online. They still must overcome some skepticism about the quality of online education and the prospects for having the courses cover the costs of producing them, but their enthusiasm is undimmed.

But at universities that have not yet seized a piece of this action, the response ranges from curiosity to fear of losing a crucial competition. When University of Virginia trustees ousted their president last month ? a decision they later reversed ? one reason cited was concern about being left behind online. (Virginia was included in Tuesday?s announcement.)

?There?s panic,? said Kevin Carey, director of education policy at the New America Foundation, a nonpartisan research group. ?Whether it?s senseless panic is unclear.?

Massive open online courses, or MOOCs, let colleges reach vast audiences at relatively low cost, but they have not yet made money from them. And if it becomes possible in years to come to get a complete college education from an elite institution online, free or at relatively low cost, experts wonder whether some colleges will find it harder to attract students willing to pay $20,000, $40,000 or even $60,000 a year for the traditional on-campus experience.

Online classes have been around for years, with technology evolving to include multimedia features and interaction among students and faculty. What is new is the way top colleges are jumping in with free courses ? in effect, throwing open the doors digitally.

So far, most people signing up live in foreign countries. But MOOCs will become more appealing to domestic students when they give course credits toward a degree, something the elite universities have not yet done. The University of Washington says it plans to do so, and it may be just a matter of time before earning credits becomes standard.

?The people who should be worried about this are the large tier of American universities ? especially the expensive private schools ? that are not elite and don?t have the same reputation? as the big-name universities now creating MOOCs, said Anya Kamenetz, an author who writes on the future of higher education.

Residential colleges already attract far less than half of the higher education market. Most enrollment and nearly all growth in higher education is in less costly options that let students balance classes with work and family: commuter colleges, night schools, online universities.

Most experts say there will always be students who want to live on campus, interacting with professors and fellow students, particularly at prestigious universities. But as a share of the college market, that is likely to be a shrinking niche.

The elite universities will be best able to compete with low-cost alternatives because their large endowments make them less dependent on tuition income, and they can lower their effective prices through generous financial aid, said John Nelson, a managing director at Moody?s Investors Service who analyzes higher education finances.

Analysts say that universities will inevitably try to make money from MOOCs, whether by charging tuition or not. Software companies working with colleges have looked into advertising, or selling information on students to prospective employers.
William E. Kirwan, chancellor of the University System of Maryland, noted that a few public colleges, including his system?s University College, already offer mostly online courses. In the future, he said, the standard class will be a hybrid of in-person and online elements, which Maryland is experimenting with.

?We think this approach can cut costs by about 25 percent,? he said, ?enabling each professor to work with more students, while producing a clear improvement in learning outcomes.?

For a decade, Carnegie Mellon University?s Open Learning Initiative has created free online courses. But for many educators, Stanford fired the starting gun last fall, with a free online course in artificial intelligence that drew 160,000 students.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology started a free class project, MITx, in December. The next month, a Stanford professor who helped teach the artificial intelligence class founded Udacity, a company offering free courses in partnership with colleges and professors.

In April, Stanford, Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Michigan joined forces with Coursera to offer free classes. In May, Harvard teamed with M.I.T. to create a similar venture, edX.
In the last week, more universities signed on with Coursera.

?Our participation was finalized literally over the weekend,? said J. Milton Adams, vice provost at the University of Virginia, which listed five free courses. ?I?m going to have some unhappy faculty members saying, ?Why can?t my course be on there?? ?
 
college is still worth it for those that don't have to go crazy in debt to pay for it as long as you get a degree in a field where they can't outsource your job or is heavily depending on some type of government funding (say like a civil engineer, etc.)

getting some kind of scholarship is the way to go
 
I graduated top of my class, so it was well worth the investment I made. Most was paid by GI Bill... When you have with Honors on your resume it opens a few more doors...
 
I graduated top of my class, so it was well worth the investment I made. Most was paid by GI Bill... When you have with Honors on your resume it opens a few more doors...

sure does...always has carried weight and always will
 
GI bill is awesome, financing school is foolish. Entrepreneurship is the way to go, it's what I teach my kids and if all goes according to plan, it's what they'll teach theirs:) it's America, land of opportunity!
 
My brother had 2 yrs of college in and at 21 said fuck it. Went and took A+, Net+ and MCSE classes. Started off at $30K 10 yrs ago and now will make high 80's this year with bonus and works 5 minutes from his house. He runs an entire IT dept for 450 employes in 6 branch offices.

Not every kid is college material and I know a lot of well off electricians, HVAC, plumbers and IT nerds. A lot has to do with personal ambition too.

Friend of mine from back in high school did exactly that. He gets multi-million dollar budgets to build IT systems for other companies. He's an IT department by himself.
 
I've talked to my kids about their futures. I believe the way to go is back to the basics. Machining, welding, carpentry, plumbing, HVAC, IT, etc. Those are fields that literally can not be outsourced.
 
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yep...because anything that can, eventually will be.
 
I am a divoce lawyer and the success of the top 10% of my clients, based on net worth, has nothing to do with a college education. They were risk takers who started businesses. I have had HVAC guys making $2 million a year, and plumbers doing the same. They are not doctors and lawyers from Harvard, they were smal business owners who created something. And from what I see it is actually not a trait that is taught in any school. The funny side is that a much higher percentage of my clients who were born abroad start businesses.
 
most jobs require a college degree, and you cant expect to get a decent promotion without it now.
 
I am a divoce lawyer and the success of the top 10% of my clients, based on net worth, has nothing to do with a college education. They were risk takers who started businesses. I have had HVAC guys making $2 million a year, and plumbers doing the same. They are not doctors and lawyers from Harvard, they were smal business owners who created something. And from what I see it is actually not a trait that is taught in any school. The funny side is that a much higher percentage of my clients who were born abroad start businesses.


that is interesting info right here^^^ people who are born abroad come to America for the opportunities we offer. most Americans believe education is the "only way to have financial security", I base my opinion on my array of friends, and on employees (some of which make upwards $500 a day) who have become acquaintances and are from other countries that offer much less in the "way of opportunity"

I find it very interesting that the latest generations are so bent on "education being the ticket to success" when there is very little freedom in working for someone else compared to working for yourself. I have done both, and am happier on my own.


 
I am a divoce lawyer and the success of the top 10% of my clients, based on net worth, has nothing to do with a college education. They were risk takers who started businesses. I have had HVAC guys making $2 million a year, and plumbers doing the same. They are not doctors and lawyers from Harvard, they were smal business owners who created something. And from what I see it is actually not a trait that is taught in any school. The funny side is that a much higher percentage of my clients who were born abroad start businesses.
interesting I wonder if prince has a degree?
 
that is interesting info right here^^^ people who are born abroad come to America for the opportunities we offer. most Americans believe education is the "only way to have financial security", I base my opinion on my array of friends, and on employees (some of which make upwards $500 a day) who have become acquaintances and are from other countries that offer much less in the "way of opportunity"

I find it very interesting that the latest generations are so bent on "education being the ticket to success" when there is very little freedom in working for someone else compared to working for yourself. I have done both, and am happier on my own.

immigrants have always been the foundation of growth in the US as they see the things (opportunities) that we who are born in the US miss and/or take for granted. but not everyone is meant or designed to be a business owner as it takes a lot of self discipline, a trait many American's do not have.
 
immigrants have always been the foundation of growth in the US as they see the things (opportunities) that we who are born in the US miss and/or take for granted. but not everyone is meant or designed to be a business owner as it takes a lot of self discipline, a trait many American's do not have.


yup, I take my kids to work with me when we have vacancies that need a little refurb. I put them to work, sanding or doing something they won't forget, they see first hand what it's like to work for their money. They are also around on the first when I go and collect rent from multiple tenants. It's a great thing to see the "light bulb turn on n your kids mind"
 
immigrants have always been the foundation of growth in the US as they see the things (opportunities) that we who are born in the US miss and/or take for granted. ......

This is also why so many second generation business fail, because the guy who busted his butt to build something had a kid who took success for granted, as it was handed to them.
 
This is also why so many second generation business fail, because the guy who busted his butt to build something had a kid who took success for granted, as it was handed to them.

one of my best friends growing up his grandparents owned a oil company. and the parents were so fucked up and spoiled the grandparents sold the company and set them up with a trust for $2K/week for life and this was back in the 80's. the mother drank herself to an early grave by her late 50's and the father is still kicking in his early 70's now.
 
Recession Generation Opts to Rent Not Buy Houses to Cars - Bloomberg

[h=1]Recession Generation Opts to Rent Not Buy Houses to Cars[/h] By Caroline Fairchild - Aug 8, 2012
The day Michael Anselmo signed a lease on his first apartment in New York City, he lost his job at Buck Consultants LLC. He spent about 10 months struggling to pay rent with unemployment benefits. Two years later he?s still hesitant to buy a home or even a road bike.
?Every decision that I have made since I lost my job has been colored by that insecurity I feel about the future,? said Anselmo, 28, who now rents an apartment in Austin, Texas, and works as a consultant for UnitedHealth Group Inc. ?Buying a house is just further out on the timeline for me than it used to be.?
Anselmo and many of his peers are wary about making large purchases after entering adulthood in the deepest recession and weakest recovery since World War II. Confronting a jobless rateabove 8 percent since 2009 and student-loan debt hitting about $1 trillion, 20-to-34-year-olds are renting apartments, cars and even clothing to save money and stay flexible.
As the Great Depression shaped the attitudes of a generation from 1929 until the early years of World War II, so have the financial crisis and its aftermath affected the outlook of young consumers like Anselmo, said Cliff Zukin, a professor of public policy and political science at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers, the state university of New Jersey.
[h=2]Recession Effects[/h]?This is a generation that is scared of commitment, wants to be light on their feet and needs to adjust to whatever happens,? said Zukin, who?s researched the effects of the recession on recent college graduates. ?What once was seen as a solid investment, like a house or a car, is now seen as a ball and chain with a lot of risk to it.?
One key difference is that technology now allows companies to provide younger consumers access to what they want, when they want it and at a reduced cost, said Paco Underhill, founder of New York-based consumer-behavior research and consulting firmEnvirosell.
?Renting is something that is in play that wasn?t in play during the Great Depression,? he said. ?To a modern generation, ownership isn?t about having it forever, it is about having it when you need to have it,? said Underhill, who has studied shopper behavior.
[h=2]Hourly Rental[/h]Enterprise Holdings Inc. and Hertz Global Holdings Inc. (HTZ) are expanding in what the Santa Monica, California-based research firm IBISWorld estimates to be the $1.8 billion hourly car-rental business, a segment dominated by younger drivers and made popular by Zipcar Inc. (ZIP) Startups such as Rent the Runway Inc. are supplying high-fashion apparel to satisfy those who want to wear, not own. CORT, a unit of Warren Buffett?s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A), is increasing its furniture-rental marketing efforts to college students and fledgling households, said Mark Koepsell, CORT?s senior vice president.
?Renting makes a lot of sense,? said David Blanchflower, professor of economics at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor. ?They have no money and they are not buying fridges and they are not buying the things they normally buy when they set up homes. Their incomes are a lot lower.?
[h=2]College Graduates[/h]College graduates earned less coming out of the recession, according to a May study by the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers. Those graduating during 2009 to 2011 earned a median salary in their starting job $3,000 less than the $30,000 seen in 2007. The majority of students owed $20,000 to pay off their education, and 40 percent of the 444 college graduates surveyed said their loan debt is causing them to delay major purchases such as a house or a car. The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said in March it appearedstudent loans had reached $1 trillion ?several months?earlier.
The U.S. economy shrank 4.7 percent from December 2007 to June 2009, making it the deepest and longest slump in the post-war era. In the three years since the recession ended, the economy has expanded 6.7 percent, the weakest recovery since World War II.
Even as the housing market shows some signs of revival, the slow pace of recovery is keeping the younger generation fearful of investments rather than confident about building wealth for the future, said Jeffrey Lubell, executive director for theCenter for Housing Policy, based in Washington. First-time home buyers in 2011 accounted for the smallest percentage of the total since 2006, according to the National Association of Realtors. The vacancy rate of U.S. rental properties is at its lowest level since 2002.
[h=2]Shifting Attitudes[/h]The shifting attitudes also pose a threat to retail sales, said Candace Corlett, president of New York-based retail-strategy firm WSL Strategic Retail. Younger consumers are already comfortable buying used items and borrowing from friends. Renting will only reinforce their tendency not to buy new.
?In a post-recession economy where retailers are trying to make every shopper count, it?s the wrong direction,? she said. Retail sales fell in June for a third consecutive month, the longest period of declines since 2008.
The by-the-hour segment accounts for about 6 percent of the $30.5 billion U.S. car-rental market, a share that is forecast to rise to about 10 percent in five years, according to IBISWorld.
[h=2]Enterprise?s Customers[/h]St. Louis-based Enterprise, the largest U.S. car-rental company, expanded in the segment in May by acquiring Mint Cars On-Demand, an hourly car-rental firm with locations in New Yorkand Boston. Half of Enterprise?s customers in this segment are under 35, according to company spokeswoman Laura Bryant.
Hertz, which began renting cars by the hour in 2008, plans to equip its entire 375,000-vehicle U.S. fleet with the technology for hourly rental within about a year, said Richard Broome, senior vice president of corporate affairs and communications for the Park Ridge, New Jersey-based company.
?It made sense to reach the younger demographic to get involved in car sharing,? Broome said. Those 34 and younger make up 84 percent of Hertz?s by-the-hour customer base, he said. ?The higher costs of insurance, the higher costs of fuel, the economics would lead someone to conclude that it?s a better decision to rent the car or do car sharing than it is to own a car.?
Zipcar, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company that joined the market segment in 2000, says it now has about 731,000 members and more than 11,000 vehicles worldwide. More than half of Zipcar?s customers are under 35, said Mark Norman, the company?s president and chief operating officer.
[h=2]Formal Wear[/h]?Whether it?s movies by the month, music by the song or formal wear by the occasion, all of those are a smarter way to think about consumption, and Zipcar fits into that really well,? he said. Zipcar?s shares have dropped 43 percent this year under the threat of the new competition.
While sales of new cars are rebounding, 18-to-34-year-olds accounted for 11.8 percent of vehicle registrations for new cars in the five months through May, compared with 16.5 percent in May 2007, according to data from R.L. Polk & Co., an auto-industry research company based in Southfield, Michigan.
Jared Fruchtman, 25, said using Zipcar gives him about $600 more a month to spend on dinners out, cab rides and trips on the weekends.
?It wasn?t financially worthwhile to buy or lease a car right now,? said Fruchtman, who is studying to be a certified public accountant and lives with his girlfriend in a rented apartment in San Francisco.
?I never considered buying,? he said. ?It didn?t make sense to tie ourselves down right now.?
[h=2]High Fashion[/h]That attitude extends to clothes. Rent the Runway, a website that offers high-fashion gowns and other couture for around 10 percent of the purchase price, is also targeting younger consumers. President Jennifer Fleiss, 28, said its business model is ?almost recession proof.? Since its start in 2009, the company has grown to about 3 million online members and is adding approximately 100,000 per month. In May 2011, the New York-based company raised $15 million in venture capitalfrom outside investors, said Fleiss. Rent the Runway members typically range from 15 to 35 years old, she said.
Lindsay Abrams, 22, started working in 2009 as an on-campus representative at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, one of 175 colleges with company-sponsored teams to drive brand awareness.
[h=2]Important Part[/h]?The recession has been an important part of Rent the Runway?s popularity,? said Abrams, who has rented about 15 dresses and is now a customer communications associate for the company. ?For people my age, the new thing is renting versus buying. It is a great way to save money.?
Furniture companies are also getting in on the act. Chantilly, Virginia-based CORT, the world?s largest provider of rental furniture, boosted its efforts in 2009 to reach college students and younger customers.
Koepsell, the senior vice president, said the company was?foolish? not to aim for the market earlier. Last year, CORT provided furniture to about 15,000 students and predicts that number will grow to 25,000 this year.
Among CORT?s customers is Michael Ferraiolo, a 20-year-old senior at Virginia Tech, who pays $198 monthly for everything from beds to a coffee table to furnish the rented townhouse he shares with two roommates in Blacksburg, Virginia.
?With the job market such an uncertainty, none of us know where they are going to end up,? Ferraiolo said. ?Now, more than ever, you see people moving around in different job markets all throughout their career. We just don?t know what to expect.?
Shifting attitudes about larger purchases aren?t the only reason preventing young consumers from buying. Stricter lending practices and higher requirements for down payments on houses and cars are crowding out buyers, Blanchflower, the Dartmouth economist, said.
[h=2]Build Wealth[/h]For those who choose to rent not buy, there?s a price to pay, said Lubell of the Center for Housing Policy. By foregoing purchases of assets like homes, young people are giving up on a chance to build wealth, he said.
?What you are seeing is a delay in all the kinds of decisions that require a long-term financially stable future,?Lubell said. ?That?s home purchases, that?s marriage and that?s having kids.?
Anselmo, the health consultant who rents an apartment in Austin, Texas, says he understands such arguments. Even so, he can?t bring himself to buy a house.
?The logical person in me gets pissed off when I write a check every month and it just goes down the drain,? he said.?But we are very hesitant.?
 
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