They do. But I genuinely feel sorry for Lisa. People have runs of bad luck, medical problems, bad decisions which they eventually even recognize and need to get a fresh start. But Lisa can't even discharge this debt through bankruptcy because it is mostly student loans sold to her by a predatory educational establishment.
Logical Seven Point solution to the student loan crisis:
- Write off 25%. This is a necessary concession to the debtors who, in many cases, were duped into taking out loans they couldn't afford.
- Return 75% to the institutions of origin for collection.
- Institutes get to keep 5% of the 75% for their trouble but must remit the 70% back to the government.
- They are free to hold up transcripts, cancel degrees and employ all the other measures they did to collect against the debtors as when they were students.
- If the institutions still cannot pay back the governement within the normal loan times, the government is free to attach their endowments, real estate and other assets.
- Government gets completely out of the loan business and encourages the institutions to line up their own lenders. If a tiny college like Hillsdale (Michigan) can do it, then there is no reason anyone else can't do the same.
Yes, the taxpayer takes a 30% hit up front to liquidate this crisis, but that is far better than continuing to grow this monster.
Because there’s so many of them in the marketplace, the average income of a lawyer in Minnesota is $36,000.