October 30, 2008 · 12:30 pm
How the Credit Crisis Will Make it Easier for Rich Kids to Get Into Their College of Choice
You may have heard that a male student interested in the humanities has a better chance of being accepted to a prestigious liberal arts college than a comparably qualified female candidate. How about the tale of the gifted athlete with sub-par grades who gets a full-ride to “State” on a football scholarship; everyone tells that story. Have you heard the one about the rich kid from the Upper West Side who gets in because his family is wealthy? This isn’t the kid whose family’s name is plastered all over the football stadium, dining hall, and library; he’s just your everyday, average, wealthy student who doesn’t need financial aid. The sad reality is that all but a select few of this country’s institutions of higher education take a student’s ability to pay into consideration when making an admissions decision.The economic realities of college admissions run deeper and darker than most people know.
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Filed under Economics, Finance, Politics, Uncategorized
Tagged as admission, admissions, application, Barak Obama, budget, business, college, college cost, cost, economic policy, education, education policy, equality, finance, harvard, higher education, Income, inflation, investments, Iraq, John McCain, McCain, Obama, personal finance, Politics, princeton, public policy, school, stanford, Tax, Taxes, university, wealth, yale
October 18, 2008 · 5:22 pm
Iraq FY08 – $149.2 Billion ($12.43B/month)
Afghanistan FY08 – $32.8 Billion ($2.73B/month)
Total FY08 – $180 Billion
Total since 9/11: $859 Billion
(Click on chart for larger view)

For Full Report: Congressional Research Service, “The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Global War on Terror Operations since 9/11.”

Filed under afghanistan, Economics, election, foreign policy, Iraq, Politics, Tax Policy, Uncategorized, war
Tagged as afghanistan, budget, congressional research service, cost, department of defense, economic policy, foreign policy, Iraq, terror, war