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Student Loan Interest Rankles College Grads

theodp writes "Like many recent college grads, Steven Lee finds himself unemployed in one of the roughest job markets in decades and saddled with a big pile of debt — he owes about $84,000 in student loans for undergrad and grad school. But what's really got Lee angry are the high interest rates on his government-backed student loans. 'The rate for a 30-year mortgage is around 5%,' Lee said. 'Why should anyone have to pay 8.5%? The government has bailed out homeowners. It's bailed out big businesses. Why can't it also help students?' Not only that, federal student loans are the only loans in the nation that are largely non-dischargeable in bankruptcy, have no statutes of limitations, and can't be refinanced after consolidation, so Lee can forget about pulling a move out of the GM playbook. And unlike mortgages on million-dollar vacation homes, student loans have very limited tax deductability. A spokeswoman for the Department of Education blamed Congress for the rates which she conceded 'may seem high today,' but suggested that students are a credit-unworthy lot who should thank their lucky stars that rates aren't 12% or higher. Makes one long for the good-old-days of 3% student loans, doesn't it?"

10 of 1,259 comments (clear)

  1. Typo in summary: detectability vs deductibility by bipbop · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think you mean "deductibility", not "detectability", though I'll admit to not reading very closely.

  2. Hmm.. must be some difference by cjfs · · Score: 5, Informative

    The rate for a 30-year mortgage is around 5%,' Lee said. 'Why should anyone have to pay 8.5%?

    Because if you default on the mortgage, they can take your house. Education repossession technology is still in beta. Even when it works it and rarely returns anything of value.

  3. Student Loan Forgiveness Plan by binaryspiral · · Score: 4, Informative

    Pay your loan for 10 years... and the government will excuse the rest.

    Some restrictions apply...

    http://www.nextstudent.com/articles/student-loans-forgiven.asp

  4. Re:All mine were cheap! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    In Australia, an average degree costs about $20K to $30K (depending on arts vs science/law/engineering/etc) and there's no interest on the government loan. It is, however, indexed to inflation.

    If you go overseas, you don't have to keep paying it until you return to Australia, and it is terminated upon death. That maximum rate it is taken from you pay at is 7% and that only starts when you hit about $30K to $40K per year.

    This only applies to degrees taken at public universities, but most of the universities in Australia are public (certainly all the best ones are).

    So to hear about this system America uses is quite disturbing. The university attendance rate over there must be exceptionally low?

  5. Real world loans are going to really freak you out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are two general type of student loans: direct and non-direct with a dirt cheap and a cheap interest rate. 8.5% is cheap for an UNSECURED loan that doesn't START accumulating interest until AFTER you graduate (actually Govt pays interest till you graduate).

    Dude- you got $85K with ZERO collateral. The rate is NOT unreasonable. It is the best investment you can make for your future.

    You can always become a teacher in the inner city or work 2 years for Peace Corps or any of the other methods the government has setup for most or all of your loan to be FORGIVEN.

    Stop complaining about getting cheap money with no collateral and no limitation, except that you go to school.

  6. I wonder why you're not considered credit-worthy? by Xcott+Craver · · Score: 4, Informative

    Maybe it's because you're borrowing over 80,000 dollars for a college education.

    5 minutes with a spreadsheet would tell you how much and for how long you have just screwed yourself, and by borrowing that kind of money you prove that you can't or won't spend even that much effort to think before borrowing.

    I think part of the problem is cultural: I was broke back when I went to college, and I needed loans; but I also knew that you should never borrow anywhere near enough to pay your whole tuition bill. That's far too much money to borrow even if you aren't dead broke. Poverty forces you into indebtedness, but it also makes you paranoid about accumulated debt, and you understand that something that costs tens of thousands of dollars will require you to eat Ramen, work multiple jobs, and make affordable choices even if someone will extend you credit.

    But now I hear horror stories about students who borrow enough money to buy a house in much of the USA, and use that to pay for an entire four-year degree plus graduate school. It's like the kids don't understand that they're poor; they get a credit line and stop acting like people who have to work for a living.

  7. Re:Grad student with huge loans by edwebdev · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think you must have loans that are somehow different from mine. While I don't have to make payments on most of my loans while I'm in grad school, the interest continues to accrue. I would also like to propose a distinction between "whining" and anecdotally highlighting a situation that is both unfair to individuals who decide to pursue an advanced education and harmful to the intellectual and scientific health of the country.

  8. Skilled trades are not morons by witherstaff · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's a vast difference between the skilled tradesman and what you call morons. Give me a licensed master plumber, master electrician, mechanical contractor, etc and I'll show you someone that truly understands their field and has years of experience under their belt. Sure the variety of assistants range in ability like any job, but to label the actual skilled person as a moron shows you don't understand the field. That'd be like comparing someone who flips burgers to a skilled chef. Also the skilled trades are very strongly union in every major city, unions being one of the strongest backers of the Democrats.

    As for continuing education much of the green movement is powered by installation of ultra high efficiency equipments. Pull up a wiring schematic for a 96% boiler and the various pumps and zone valves - it's anything but moronic work.

    So what's up with the trades bashing? Watch a few episodes of Dirty Jobs and you'll see some examples of problem solving at the finest.

  9. Re:All mine were cheap! by smoker2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can. Get a bank loan from somewhere else and pay off your student debt in full. Then it is not bound by the rules any more. Or have you promised to pay over a certain time span ?

  10. outrage noted :-) by r00t · · Score: 4, Informative

    That just got modded "flamebait" by somebody who clearly resents being reminded that some degrees (his own most likely) have nearly zero economic value.

    It's an annoying way to stifle debate, but at least I find it amusing. :-/