Unprecedented USA Student Loan Debt

Contract Law.

It's not just for breakfast anymore.

Or is it? :dunno:

How is student debt different from, say, mortgage debt? Auto debt? Credit card debt?

Truth is, it's not.

Fuck Liberals and Democrats to hell.
Because a home loan gets you a house. A basket weaving degree gets you kindling material.
A contract is a contract is a contract. :slap:
 
Graduate students are now estimated to owe 40% of the $1.2 TRILLION outstanding student debt.


Why the heck to they think they have to get a PhD in order to get anywhere? It's back to the point I always try to stress – we get all of these high-faultin' college degrees and forget about the trades people who keep the wheels oiled and turning.


Read more @ APOD 2014 November 9 - The Cat s Eye Nebula from Hubble
 
Graduate students are now estimated to owe 40% of the $1.2 TRILLION outstanding student debt.


Why the heck to they think they have to get a PhD in order to get anywhere? It's back to the point I always try to stress – we get all of these high-faultin' college degrees and forget about the trades people who keep the wheels oiled and turning.


Read more @ APOD 2014 November 9 - The Cat s Eye Nebula from Hubble

It is better for society to have people who have advanced knowledge of certain areas and to push those fields... To boldly go....

The person who is gaining a PhD in aeronautical engineering did not miss an opportunity to have a career changing the oil in your car.

I laugh at these guys who think education doesn't matter...

By the way those trade guys are great, they are good for servicing my car.
 
If the majority of people pursuing bachelor's degrees were suddenly switched into vocational schools, the trades would earn FAR less money, and many of those currently training for a profitable career would find themselves competed out of their chosen market.

Extremes are extreme.
 
Graduate students are now estimated to owe 40% of the $1.2 TRILLION outstanding student debt.


Why the heck to they think they have to get a PhD in order to get anywhere? It's back to the point I always try to stress – we get all of these high-faultin' college degrees and forget about the trades people who keep the wheels oiled and turning.


Read more @ APOD 2014 November 9 - The Cat s Eye Nebula from Hubble

When I was getting my degree I knew that a few girls were in school because it was an easier route to take than going out and getting a job and while many of were busy beavering away in our labs, they were doing the minimal work necessary to get by. They had a very difficult time in getting post-doc appointments and eventually found jobs far below their qualification and having nothing to do with research.

During the recent economic downtown many people used student loans as a form of income, many went back to school in order to bolster their credentials.

As education has become so widespread the credentials have become devalued, hence Starbucks baristas with college degrees, and so people are climbing the education ladder for higher degrees in order to remain competitive in a labor market where credentials carry a lot of importance.
 
One way to get a 'free' education...

A Third of All Federal Student Loans Could Go Bad, Treasury Advisory Committee Warns
November 19, 2014 – Four years after the federal government took over the student loan program, nine percent of student loans are in default and another 23 percent have the potential to go bad as well, according to a report by the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC).
“Millions of student-loan borrowers are in default on their student loans; many more could face default in the near future,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Sarah Bloom Raskin said during a Tampa speech on Nov. 6th, two days after the report was released. According to data released Nov. 7 by the Federal Reserve, Americans currently owe $1.3 trillion on their student loans. The level of education indebtedness has increased 84 percent since 2009. ”Since the passing of the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2010 (SAFRA), all federal student loans are made directly by the Department of Education and funded by the U.S. Treasury,” the TBAC report explained. “For a variety of reasons, loan growth is increasing and default rates are high and rising.”

students%20AP.png


And the current nine percent default rate, which exceeded auto loan delinquencies for the first time ever, is likely the tip of the iceberg. In June, President Obama issued an executive order allowing borrowers to cap their loan payments at 10 percent of their monthly incomes. But TBAC pointed out that “the principal and interest on the loans capitalize” during this period, “making balances larger for students and exacerbating repayment potential.” “Outstanding balances [are] declining more slowly than originally anticipated due to both increased volumes of loans in deferral and forbearance as well as longer loan tenors,” the advisory committee said. “Behind the default rate is a shadow book of potential future defaults, reflected in the volume of loans in deferment and forbearance. Those loans add 23% to the 9% that are already listed in default.”

The Class of 2014 is “the most indebted ever,” according to the Wall Street Journal, which pointed out that the average student loan increased 35 percent between 2005 and 2012, while the median salary for 25-to-34-year-olds with a bachelor’s degree decreased 2.2 percent. “It that continues, debt burdens could start to become more unwieldly,” the WSJ noted. Although supporters of SAFRA initially assured American taxpayers that the federal takeover of the student loan program would save them $87 billion, TBAC says it will likely wind up costing taxpayers more than $88 billion instead.

GRADUTION-AP%20PHOTO-ASHLEE%20CULVERHOUSE_0.jpg


And that estimate “does not include the potential cost or benefit associated with recent proposals to redesign elements of the student lending program, including: (i) reducing the interest rate; (ii) increasing repayment options; and (iii) addressing the pace of origination with a focus on qualifying institutions eligible for such programs.” The personal consequences of default for some 40 million Americans with outstanding student loans are substantial. They include a damaged credit rating, loss of tax refunds and other government benefits such as Social Security, fines, revocation of professional licenses and possible wage garnishment until the debt is paid. “While fixed-rate student debt is insulated from interest rate risk, given the consequences of default discussed earlier, political pressure may nevertheless mount to forgive or extend student debt,” the report added. If that happens, “the gross cost of maturity extension in order to increase the probability of repayment would be approximately $220 billion.”

MORE
 
One way to get a 'free' education...

A Third of All Federal Student Loans Could Go Bad, Treasury Advisory Committee Warns
November 19, 2014 – Four years after the federal government took over the student loan program, nine percent of student loans are in default and another 23 percent have the potential to go bad as well, according to a report by the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC).
“Millions of student-loan borrowers are in default on their student loans; many more could face default in the near future,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Sarah Bloom Raskin said during a Tampa speech on Nov. 6th, two days after the report was released. According to data released Nov. 7 by the Federal Reserve, Americans currently owe $1.3 trillion on their student loans. The level of education indebtedness has increased 84 percent since 2009. ”Since the passing of the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2010 (SAFRA), all federal student loans are made directly by the Department of Education and funded by the U.S. Treasury,” the TBAC report explained. “For a variety of reasons, loan growth is increasing and default rates are high and rising.”

students%20AP.png


And the current nine percent default rate, which exceeded auto loan delinquencies for the first time ever, is likely the tip of the iceberg. In June, President Obama issued an executive order allowing borrowers to cap their loan payments at 10 percent of their monthly incomes. But TBAC pointed out that “the principal and interest on the loans capitalize” during this period, “making balances larger for students and exacerbating repayment potential.” “Outstanding balances [are] declining more slowly than originally anticipated due to both increased volumes of loans in deferral and forbearance as well as longer loan tenors,” the advisory committee said. “Behind the default rate is a shadow book of potential future defaults, reflected in the volume of loans in deferment and forbearance. Those loans add 23% to the 9% that are already listed in default.”

The Class of 2014 is “the most indebted ever,” according to the Wall Street Journal, which pointed out that the average student loan increased 35 percent between 2005 and 2012, while the median salary for 25-to-34-year-olds with a bachelor’s degree decreased 2.2 percent. “It that continues, debt burdens could start to become more unwieldly,” the WSJ noted. Although supporters of SAFRA initially assured American taxpayers that the federal takeover of the student loan program would save them $87 billion, TBAC says it will likely wind up costing taxpayers more than $88 billion instead.

GRADUTION-AP%20PHOTO-ASHLEE%20CULVERHOUSE_0.jpg


And that estimate “does not include the potential cost or benefit associated with recent proposals to redesign elements of the student lending program, including: (i) reducing the interest rate; (ii) increasing repayment options; and (iii) addressing the pace of origination with a focus on qualifying institutions eligible for such programs.” The personal consequences of default for some 40 million Americans with outstanding student loans are substantial. They include a damaged credit rating, loss of tax refunds and other government benefits such as Social Security, fines, revocation of professional licenses and possible wage garnishment until the debt is paid. “While fixed-rate student debt is insulated from interest rate risk, given the consequences of default discussed earlier, political pressure may nevertheless mount to forgive or extend student debt,” the report added. If that happens, “the gross cost of maturity extension in order to increase the probability of repayment would be approximately $220 billion.”

MORE
This is a typical example of invrnting debt, not for repayment but for control. Government`s push forr unlimited power.
 

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