Posted on 07/19/2013 12:43:43 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
I don't understand what they are thinking.
I speak of the nearly 37 million Americans who owe roughly $1 trillion total in student-loan debt most of it FEDERAL student-loan debt. And that's for loans taken out before the interest rate on new, federally subsidized student loans doubled a little over a week ago.
The numbers are staggering. According to the informational nonprofit American Student Assistance, the average student-loan balance stands at around $24,300. A rough breakdown shows that:
4.175 million borrowers owe more than $28,000.
1.67 million borrowers owe more than $54,000.
501,000 borrowers owe more than $100,000.
167,000 borrowers owe more than $200,000.
I sure hope these people aren't English majors.
But it gets worse. When you factor in credit cards and money bummed from family members, says CNN, each member of the Class of 2013 owes an average of $35,200.
Why do students owe so much these days? The main reason: Tuitions have been soaring, far outpacing both medical and cost-of-living inflation for more than 30 years.
Recent tuition increases are in response to state-funding cuts. Many states, which have to balance their budgets, are giving state universities less and to cover the shortfall, state universities have increased tuitions.
Universities are able to keep increasing tuitions, in part, because lax lending policies allow most any student to borrow more to cover the increased costs.
A sixth-grader can see the correlation between easy borrowing and the steady increase in college tuitions. To wit: School tuitions have continued to soar because they are able to.
And boy, have some student-loan borrowers racked themselves with debt.
Don't many of us know someone who borrowed thousands of dollars for culinary school and now makes 10 bucks an hour?
We know of college graduates with jobs that don't require college degrees working second jobs to come up with the $1,000 or more they need to meet monthly student-loan repayment obligations.
That goes for those who are paying back their loans. Nearly 10 percent of student-loan borrowers are defaulting.
I was lucky to graduate from Penn State in 1985 owing only $7,500 in student loans.
Had I been able to borrow lots more, I surely would have tried. Then I could have lived in the lap of luxury, the way many college kids do today.
I surely wouldn't have worked during my college days as a stonemason, dishwasher, janitor, handyman, grass-cutter and bouncer though as a bouncer, I received the most respect I ever got, then or now.
To raise additional funds, I went to a medical clinic twice a week and sold my plasma. They sucked out my blood, spun off the plasma, then gave me my blood back for $10.
Those lousy plasma donations nearly killed me, though my mother, who dedicated her life to giving her children good health, almost strangled me when she found out why I was so pale.
I managed a rooming house during my senior year. It was a big old dump of a place, complete with cockroaches in the kitchen, but I lived there almost free to slash my costs.
My mentality was shaped by my father, a child of the Great Depression. My father has always shunned debt and favored hard work.
When he learned I had become an English major, he begged me to take up something more practical. I was the only person ever to graduate from Penn State with a major in English and a minor in air conditioning/heating.
In any event, we are finally reaching a point where younger generations are questioning the high costs of college education. Is the massive debt worth it?
I don't know the long-term answer to that. But if you borrow thousands of dollars to become an English major, you might want to minor in welding.
Translation: BOHICA!
I’m so glad I paid cash for my nearly useless college education.
Anyone who gets their college debt forgiven by the taxpayers will never be hired by me.
As I understand it, educational loans cannot be discharged by bankruptcy; the only way to escape repaying it is death and even then they probably come after your estate.
Surely this calls for a Catastrophe ping.
I think the taxpayers should help pay my student loan. to wit, my high school education was so poor, I didn’t understand finances (not to mention poor critical thinking skills), although i’m pretty versed in diversity and abortion rights, so I borrowed without knowing I had any responsibility to pay it off.
RE: Anyone who gets their college debt forgiven by the taxpayers will never be hired by me.
Is that going to be part of your interview question? :)
I do care how people finance their college education. Of course the Feds probably won’t allow it to be asked.
I look at it this way: Get it from the schools that defrauded these losers.
What is now called “college” is a sorry farce.
If we can use this to break the back of the system, that’s all to the good.
I’m seriously looking at the possibility of having my kids study abroad.
” I do care how people finance their college education. Of course the Feds probably wont allow it to be asked.”
You are smart enough, to “back door” it, and get your answer.
“What is now called college is a sorry farce.”
It depends on what major you pursue.
Sounds like another bubble about to burst. Guess we’ll be bailing out the financial institutions holding all of this worthless paper.
>>Im seriously looking at the possibility of having my kids study abroad.
Its not a bad idea, I studied a broad in college, and now I am married to her.
Tee hee.
From the figures cited in the article, most of the money <$28,000 per student, is owed by approx 32 million students. Having resided near a big ten college, party and upscale living expenses are the main costs for the large amounts owed in addition of a general aversion to working while in college.
When I was going to college we used to donate blood so we could get drunk easier. ;-)
Why would you hire ANYONE who has college debt? The most capable in their fields can find a way to combine scholarships and working, and choose their college after a discussion with family of how much they can afford.
My cousin's granddaughter just finished her college education at age 27. After one year in a state college dorm, she switched to night classes, online classes, and working in the local hospital. She has no debt, a wonderful resume, and the very high likelihood of moving up with her UMASS business degree!
That's anecdotal, sure. Examples like this one are what HS graduates should be encouraged to follow.
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