One of the ironies of (at one point) anonymously
managing a blog lamenting the plight of
dejected law grads is that I achieved a certain level of fame – most likely the
greatest celebrity I will ever experience in my life.
No, it didn’t amount to the fame of a well-known legal
scholar nor of even some of my other former “scam blogger” contemporaries.
Nevertheless, I certainly never expected to be interviewed or profiled by the
National Jurist or the Wall Street Journal.
It was, of course, ironic because all of the attention was
directed towards a pseudonymous caricature, and instead of heralding success,
it was a byproduct of my miserable condition.
Nevertheless, my anti-LS scam compatriots and I were usually
one side of a story that also featured at least one apologist for the reigning
system – whether law school dean, an ABA representative, or just a general
mercenary for the machine.
In those days, condescending and dismissive remarks were the
norm. I remember one dean bemoaning that LS critics tended to make the most
noise because they were the most displeased. She further asserted that the
majority of graduates were happily and quietly pursuing post-JD endeavors.
We now know this to be nonsense. In the years that have
elapsed since this and other blogs have gone dormant, the mainline media has
recognized that something is amiss as class after class of law grads are thrust
into the unemployment grinder.
The Washington Post, the New York Times, and Slate have all
run stories to this effect. If they don’t fully endorse the idea that the law
school cartel is managing a full blown
scam, they are at least exploring the repercussions of saddling freshly minted
JD’s with mind blowing debt while the schools shout ‘caveat emptor’ and hungrily
look towards the next harvest.
Sure, every now and then an apologist pops his head up from
the trenches in order to predict the imminent recovery of the legal market or
to offer an unpersuasive case for paying the equivalent of three or four
Mercedes for an unmarketable degree.
Nobody is buying it, though. The damage has been done. Yes,
law schools are still signing up poor naifs who never paid attention to begin
with, but class sizes have shrunk drastically. Anyone who has done a modicum of
research knows that a nightmare awaits most law grads.
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves, though. What changed
between 2009 and our present period in which enrollment is tanking, faculty is
being axed, and even multi-campus outlets are shuttering some of their satellites?
For one thing, while the conventional wisdom about law
school has moved closer to the truth, it still adheres to at least one fallacy:
The idea that law school was an A-Okay option prior to 2009.
This was not the case. Yes, between 2003 and 2008, a T-14
degree probably would land you solid employment. Even grades in the top 50% at
a top 25 school would make you competitive for large firm jobs.
This more sanguine picture, however, concealed the dark
truth about the fates of non-elite students. After three years of study and
tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of debt, these students ended up in toilet
law legal mills, document review sweatshops, or non-legal roles that would have
been easier to secure without the JD.
For years, the strategy of the law school cartel was clear:
dangle the ostensible treasures afforded to the top 10% in front of prospective
students and then lump toilet law proles and document review slaves into the
‘ol “Employed – JD required” bucket for reporting purposes.
The masses bought it; the mystique and prestige of the law
degree was preserved while unctuous law administrators and professors feasted
on the ceaseless blood money flowing from Sallie Mae and Access Group via the
financial futures of so many deceived souls.
It’s little wonder that the perpetrators of the scam saw the
crash as more of a hiccup than a catastrophe. In their collective minds, all
they needed to do was enjoy the influx of prospective students fleeing an
ailing labor market and lie and deny whenever pressed about the fate of their
recent graduates.
They reasoned that once the market rebounded, it would be
business as usual. There would once again be enough elite, “golden children” to
mask the plight of the average graduate, and the scam could start humming along
as usual.
The law schools, however, grossly miscalculated the extent
of the crash. When the bottom fell out of the legal industry, it didn’t just
filter out some participants, it utterly obliterated the sector’s very
infrastructure.
Cost conscious firms carefully scrutinized their legal bills
in an effort to save costs; the reverberations impacted the entire industry all
the way down to the mills and document review.
BigLaw associate classes appear to have permanently shrunk.
The ripple effect has made hiring down the chain even more competitive than it
previously was. Less funding for public legal resources has introduced added
pressure, and the once safe haven of document review – if safe havens can be
found in poorly ventilated, converted boiler rooms – is nothing like it used to
be.
While the overall economy has more or less rebounded from
the Great Recession, the legal industry remains stagnant.
We can quibble about the mechanics of the sorry state of
legal employment, but it is undeniable that five years out, there isn’t enough
good news for the LS cartel to countervail the tales of debt and despair that
dominate legal employment articles.
The economy is likely the best it’s going be during this
present expansion, and at some point, there will be another recession. This
will bring only further misery to attorneys and further deprecate the law
school brand.
The jig is up. Even the slickest deans haven’t been able to
spin the situation. Their previously enticing coos of prestige and prosperity
sound more and more like a cacophony of used car salesmen trying to unload
those jeeps from the 90’s that used to flip over.
This, however, still begs the question why haven’t we seen
the cartel collapse under the pressure of these seemingly irresistible economic
forces?
The easy answer is to point to the ubiquitous loans and
their “generous” repayment terms.
To be sure, were the federal student loans to disappear
tomorrow (particularly if coupled with the ability to discharge private loans
in bankruptcy), the law school cartel would vanish as well.
Moreover, without GradPLUS loans and the IBR/PAYE repayment
plans, the default rate among recent graduates would be astronomical. As
depressing and infuriating as the post-law school horror stories are today, the
criminality of such a situation would quickly bring the enterprise crashing
down whether by the market or the courts.
Nevertheless, from a short term perspective, you can
essentially go to law school for free. Moreover, when you graduate, you will
never pay more than 10% of your AGI in student loan repayments.
Two hundred large in debt is hard to overlook even under
these conditions, but if people really did believe that signing some promissory
note and spending three years at school meant entrance into the upper middle
class upon graduation, this might still be enticing.
The “free” education argument, however, isn’t washing with
more and more prospective law students. Sure, the debt may be “manageable”
(though non-repayable), but if there’s no pot of gold at the end of rainbow,
why even assume supposedly manageable debt.
The law school machine has been routed in the PR game, yet
despite the hits it has taken, no major, accredited law school has fallen.
While discouraging, I am nevertheless optimistic that we’ll
eventually see some of the schools give up the proverbial ghost. The student
loan elixir has delayed the inevitable, but at some point, market forces will
give way to a necessary correction.
It remains to be seen whether the closing of a few law
schools will either result in institution wide reform – more practical
coursework, lower tuition, and fewer semesters – or simply a reduction in the
number of “firms” in this saturated sector.
For the time being, however, law schools have to grapple with
the present economics of reduced demand for their services.
With fewer prospective students, law schools only have two
unpleasant choices: Reduce tuition and hack away at the scam’s raison d'être or attempt to retain the present cash flow
and torpedo the prestige to which these pseudo-august institutions so jealously
cling.
There really is no
other choice. Bread and circuses won’t fly anymore. If prospective students are
unpersuaded that there are ample legal jobs available, no amount of moot court
rooms with mahogany benches and cutting edge technology is going to drive them
in.
If enrollment
continues to decline, maintaining both high academic standards and fiscal
solvency will be a difficult feat. There will be a smaller and smaller pool of
quality applicants, who will be on the lookout for either bargains or true
prestige.
Prospective students
will still be courted heavily with scholarship offers from schools that at one
time would have been far outside of their leagues. It’s unlikely that the
“pedigree” of a top 50 or even 25 school would be enticing in comparison.
As enrollment
tanks, this will be a very costly strategy to pursue. Cutting costs could
mitigate the impact of decreased revenue from tuition, but less impressive
facilities and fewer perks like lavish moot court trips could make law school
an even more miserable environment.
Moreover, cutting
faculty could mean the availability of fewer interesting courses, and a reduced
support staff would likely result in delays in important administrative tasks
(transcript requests; graduation verification).
I’m certainly not
advocating retaining the largesse of the cartel, but for students with
shorter-term time preferences, the loss of such immediate perquisites could
serve as disincentives to matriculation.
While reducing
tuition either directly or more subtly via increased financial aid is a costly
endeavor, sacrificing student quality could be an even more dangerous game.
Schools somewhere
in the middle can tolerate poorer LSAT scores and GPA’s for a while. They just
need to hope that their peer institutions need to make similar sacrifices, and
they can at least hold their relative place in the LS pecking order – for
whatever that’s worth.
While the mid-tier
schools can try to wait out the rough seas in their metaphorical dinghies of reduced
academic standards – awaiting either miraculous salvation or the final storm to
take them under – the bottom feeder schools don’t have such luxury.
At first blush, one
might see this as business as usual for the true toilet institutions. These
schools never really served any purpose but to separate the fool from his money
to begin with. What should they care if someone barely signed his name to the
LSAT and did nothing else?
While the TTT(T)
class of schools may have no problem emptying the local sanatoriums and having
classes full of law students drooling on themselves while some old codger
drones on with a canned lectured about Penoyer, the ABA may think
differently.
Sure, the ABA and
related bodies have been pleased to let the cartel run on its merry way, but
they are starting to face more pressure. Moreover, even during the heyday of
the scam, they were only willing to tolerate a certain bar failure rate.
This means, that
unless the ABA abruptly jettisons all standards, the absolute garbage schools
are going to start coming close to the end of the rope. They may be willing to
tolerate students who don’t know the difference between long arm statutes and
chewing on their own arms, but the state bar examiners won’t be so kind.
In summary, as long
as conditions remain the same or continue to deteriorate, the law schools are
stuck in a vicious cycle of financial decline and academic debasement.
Only the most elite
schools – the only ones with any purpose under the present law school model –
can attract strong student bodies. Middling schools will have to contend for
what were once mediocre matriculants (and will pay heavily for them).
For many schools,
this is the pathway toward a level of financial calamity that was once only
reserved for their graduates. Nevertheless, the alternative – academic
degradation – will instead send bar passage rates into the cellar (with the
attendant possibility of loss of accreditation).
The nation’s
fixation on higher education at any cost and the undying spigot of student
loans mean that law schools still have time to limbo to see how low they can go
both financially and academically.
Nonetheless, as
mentioned, nothing short of a radical reversal of fortune for the legal labor
market will change this trajectory. With this phenomena unlikely, the collapse
of the law school scam is all but inevitable if not immediately imminent.
Yes, it would be
nice if the courts or the government did their job and pulled the plug on this
colossal fraud. Nevertheless, the slow, painful death of the scam is underway
even if the government won’t give it the swift execution it deserves.
The law school
apologists may be able to grab a few more bucks on the way out. They may even
be able deny and continue to spin on their way to their demise, but evidence of
the collapse abounds.
Faculty buy-outs
are on the rise. One law school is teetering on bankruptcy. Enrollment rates
are low as they’ve ever been. Deans are sucking in as many transfer students as
possible to try to simultaneously retain revenue and preserve their academic
rankings.
Perhaps the most
telling sign is that the deans are even marching to war against each other in
an academic survival of the fittest. The aforementioned scrounging for transfer
students has pitted the American and George Washington deans against each
other.
Regardless of the
specific observations, the once unsinkable scam has hit the iceberg and is
taking on water faster than it can bail it out.
When I was
consistently blogging about five years ago, the debate was somewhat
theoretical. It was a political debate like the death penalty or tax policy.
Each side had their own arguments and metrics.
Sure, the anti-scam
movement was correct, but in the same way you may feel you’re correct about the
political issue de jure. Someone is always going to disagree with you, and the
debate will often get lost in a morass of competing statistics, rhetorical
barbs, and outright insults.
While debates over
philosophy and theory may be difficult to resolve, debates over the feasibility
of a commodity are subject to a market test. A business owner (or shifty law
dean) can proclaim to the world that his product is the best, but if the masses
believe he’s hawking overpriced schlock, he’s out of business.
Sure, he can believe
that consumers are fools and they don’t know what they’re missing, but that
will be all the consolation he will have as he fills out the bankruptcy
paperwork.
I began this
article with the irony of attaining “fame” while guarding my anonymity, so let
me end with another unexpected twist.
At one point, the
law school cartel and I actually had the same thought process. We both assumed
the secret sauce of their scam just needed two ingredients: Easy money (in
unlimited student loans) and a healthy dose of marketing deception.
In the case of the
law school cartel, the realization of this miscalculation has resulted in the
gnashing of teeth as they recognize Rome is burning. For me, however, it is an unexpected
signal that - after all the debt, despair, and ruin imposed by the law school
machine – an immoral empire will eventually be brought to its knees.
This is a fine piece of work. Thanks.
ReplyDelete"Sure, the debt may be “manageable”..."
ReplyDeleteLook at where the oversupply has sent salary. Sometimes to nothing, to "volunteer" positions. When you're making 33k as a PD, adding 10% or 15% in loan repayment on top of tax contributions is a big deal, because you need every dollar.
What IBR/PAYE really do is charge a debtor additional interest to keep his loan out of default. If his loan did default within three years of graduating, that default would be counted in the school's limit on defaults.
The number of fed student loan defaults that a school can have and still take money from the federal lending system is capped.
I am going to let my loans default on purpose and then "rehabilitate" them to remove the default from my credit report, because I refuse to pay more interest so that my law school can (with the government's blessing) lie about her default rate.
If you're on IBR/PAYE, you're in default.
Nice article.
ReplyDeleteI have always felt that those who spoke freely and truthfully about The Scam were doing The Lord's Work.
ReplyDeleteI still do. Carry on.
This is way too long. Clearly, you learned how to write in law school. Another failure.
ReplyDeleteWow, a flame from someone who is presumably on my side.
DeleteIf the anti-Scam consensus is so vast that we're throwing punches in our own dugout, I'll consider that progress.
It was a very fine article. It was written perfectly.
DeleteI expect the anti-Scam movement to grow stronger, as each graduating class comes to the realization that they've been scammed. I graduated in 2008. It took me a few years to accept that fact. The blogs helped!
Delete"BigLaw associate classes appear to have permanently shrunk. The ripple effect has made hiring down the chain even more competitive than it previously was. Less funding for public legal resources has introduced added pressure, and the once safe haven of document review – if safe havens can be found in poorly ventilated, converted boiler rooms – is nothing like it used to be.
ReplyDeleteWhile the overall economy has more or less rebounded from the Great Recession, the legal industry remains stagnant."
Speaking as a partner in a big firm, I can confirm this. Things are nearly as rough now as they were in 2009. IMO, the sector has permanently changed.
Your article above, although a bit overly lengthy, is dead on point. It sums up, my thoughts and concepts about the various lawland scams (Law is a scam, not just law school) in words that are much better laid out than those that I have been posting since 2006. The only things missing in your piece are the profiling of those who benefit from the scam that is law and law school along with the concept of who are law's Preferred, Protected and or seriously Connected (PPC) people. That aside, you are doing the Lorde's work. God bless!
ReplyDeleteThe Infamous John J. Bungsolaphagus AKA The Greatest Poster Known ("GPK"), Bringing Truth To Lawland Lemmings and Power Since 2006. God Bless!
Twitter: @JBTheProphet
Today's job report insists things are back to normal, with only wage growth left. But my legal career is still in shambles. Actually I don't have a legal career. All I do is doc review, and those rates have been collapsing and yet somehow projects are a pain in the ass to get on anyway.
ReplyDeleteAt least if the legal field recovered maybe the rates would get higher and I could get on projects when I wanted. And maybe they wouldn't treat people as badly as they can. But that doesn't look possible right now.
Graduated with high honors in 2009: I am lucky to find sweatshop document review jobs. Mostly have to commute over two hours each way to get to job. I went to my law school "career services" office. WHAT A JOKE. Their sage advice? Network. Gee. Why didn't I think of that! Also, being a female and older makes it even harder. This is still a VERY elitist and patriarchal field. The professors (and many older lawyers ensconced in their positions) are in their ivory towers and are oblivious (or act oblivious) to the plight of the entry-level attorney.
ReplyDeleteThis article is awesome. Having said that, it also makes me sick to my stomach when I think about all the law school victims (like myself) and future victims/lemmings!
ReplyDeleteI didn't go to Harvard, Yale or Stanford. Nevertheless, I thought for sure my JD would make me marketable. I thought it was versatile and would complement my other skills and experience. It's not versatile! That's a load of shit!
It's amazing too how many practicing lawyers are trying to exit the profession. Law school deans try to spin this as opportunity for the next generation of lawyers, but that's not the case.
Law schools need to do the industry (and country as a whole) a favor and shut down completely for three years. After that, only a quarter of those law schools should re-open. That's the only way I see supply and demand rebalancing.
When I see someone with an LSAT or law school book with them these days, I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry.
ReplyDelete