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Student Loans In America: the Next Big Credit Bubble

PolygamousRanchKid writes "In late 1965, President Lyndon Johnson stood in the modest gymnasium of what had once been the tiny teaching college he attended and announced a program to promote education. Almost a half-century later these modest steps have metastasized into a huge, federally guaranteed student-loan industry. On October 25th the Obama administration added indebted students to the list of banks, car companies, homeowners, solar manufacturers and others that have benefited from a federal handout. In response to students burying their obligations in court during the 1970s, anti-default provisions were imposed to make it almost impossible to shed student loans in bankruptcy. There are increasingly loud calls for reform of the system, with demands that range from a full-fledged bail-out of borrowers to a phased curtailment of government lending. The changes announced this week are designed to ease the pressure on struggling graduates. Borrowers who qualify will get payment relief, not debt relief. The administration says these changes will have no cost to taxpayers."

8 of 768 comments (clear)

  1. Same broken solution to a cost problem by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem here is that the costs continue to skyrocket. Any solution that doesn't address that is simply a band-aid.

    Why do costs continue to skyrocket? Because the colleges know that effectively any student anywhere can get loans to pay for the cost of college. From the school's standpoint, they can just about charge whatever they want. There's no brake on the price increase.

    This is of course compounded by cuts from government support to the colleges. But the bubble has been inflating since long before the current economic trouble. It is certainly making it worse right now, but it's not the root cause of the problem.

    And you can definitely see where the money is spent on the campuses. I work with college researchers and had the opportunity to visit a couple of state schools recently. And compared to when I went to college just 15 years ago, these places are absolutely gorgeous. Until there is some means of implementing cost control at the schools - without affecting the ability of students to go to college - this won't change.

    1. Re:Same broken solution to a cost problem by ras · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know where else Government got involved in the 1960s. . Health care via medicare.

      Yes, well there is one little problem with this "governments are the problem". And that is just about other place on the planet gets better bang for the buck in their heath care than the US, and they do it by using more government regulation, not less.

      You are right though. The government is the problem. But it is not everybodies government. It's yours. Most governments on the planet seem to be able to design systems that aren't rorted by corporates. The US - you lot seem to specialise in corporate welfare. And its not small business corporate welfare either. It's always the big end of town. Your banks fuck up and send the economy to hell and what do you do - bail out the bloody banks. You establish a student loan system and rather than forcing them to provide more education for the extra dollars, what do you do - allow them to rake off the extra money by charging more. You design new public health insurance system and who do you let write the rules - the bloody health insurance industry. I wonder who they will favour? The way your industrial complex sucks off the teat of the government paid for military is so bad your politicians invented a new word for it.

      Then the cretins among you then say "our government is too big, too strong, running too much of the country, we must chop it down to size." Well it may be too big. But it's not because it's too strong. It's because it's too weak, and continually allows itself to be bought with corporate money. It's called capitalistic cronyism - the person with the most money gets to buy the most government influence. If you want to see it in action now, just look at how the legal fraternity is manipulating patent law. When that happens what you end up with is what we see in the US today - the people with the most money ensuring the bulk of the taxes end up in their pockets. When there aren't enough taxes to satisfy your corporate overloads, what do they manipulate your government into doing - borrowing more. To bail them out of all things. It's beyond belief.

      It's time you guys woke up to yourselves and go got yourselves a real democracy. You know, one where votes aren't bought by the person who can spend the most on advertising. They have to be earned, by putting money in the pockets of the voter.

  2. One of many causes of problem by Pollux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For-profit schools. Shut them down. Period.

    The average annual tuition for for-profit schools this year is about $14,000. Public four-year colleges charge, on average, $7,605 per year in tuition and fees for in-state students. What's worse is this: The default rate on student loans from for-profit institutions is 15%, while the default rate at public universities is only 7.2 percent (same source).

    For-profit schools are milking the American taxpayer for money. Just walk into any one of these schools, tell them you want to be a nurse / chef / accountant / whatever, and they'll lay down a student loan form for you to sign before you could even say "Herbie Hancock." Because, at least with the present law, once a for-profit school gets their money from Uncle Sam, it's theirs, no strings attached. I'd almost call it fraud, except those students who enroll in a for-profit school actually do get something in return, even if it is a sorry-excuse of a half-ass education. (PBS did an excellent documentary a year back on for-profit schools, particularly exposing the "value" of a diploma one gets from these crooks. You can watch it here.)

    What's sad is that there's a really simple solution to all this: require a for-profit school to assume some of the risk. If we required a for-profit school to pay back even just 50% of the loan that was defaulted on, you'd see the default rate decrease overnight.

  3. Re:Australia does a simple job here by unencode200x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From what I've one of the major reasons prices have risen at public universities is because states contribute less to them. This has been the case for the last 10 years. There are many sources to cite but here is a good one: http://www.highereducation.org/reports/losing_ground/ar2.shtml . Inflation and stagnant wages make it even worse.

    Reduced state aid, stagnant wages (for the last 30 years as compared to inflation), a more competitive job market, and stricter borrowing are all conspiring to make college much less affordable for the upcoming college-bound generation and the last one.

    --

    Chance favors the prepared mind.
    Perfect is the enemy of good.
  4. the people who own the debt by decora · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it is really hilarious to watch people bitching about everything from dorms that are too nice to too many mac's in the computer labs, but nobody wants to follow the money.

    student loan debt is securitized and resold to various investors, just like housing debt was in the housing bubble. its the securitization chain, and the big banks are behind it, along with the corrupt government agencies that look the other way instead of doing their job (preventing fraud, preventing false advertising, preventing misdeeds by the credit ratings agencies, etc)

    it is like this never ending pattern when people talk about financial matters. everyone goes off their own personal experience instead of approaching it like a hacker: : : how does the system work? what are it's major pieces? how do they fit together? what is the flow in between those pieces? if people would just ask those basic fucking questions we wouldnt be in this fucking recession.

    instead its 'oh no, i graduated and i payed my debt off, these freeloaders / communists / blah blah blah' .. complete and utter red herring bullshit that is in no way helpful to solving the problems of the planet.

  5. Re:Forgiveness at no cost? by Maestro4k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the one hand, this seems entirely fair, on the other, it sounds like a ticket to four cheap years at party U for people who intend to loaf and/or earn their income illegally / off grid for the next 20 years.

    I think the number of people willing to live at poverty levels for 20 years so they can get 4 years of partying at a university, and that will actually follow through on it willfully, are very, very low. 150% of poverty level isn't a lot of money, you can't live high on the hog with that kind of income, not even single. And the type of people who'd actually consider living it up on borrowed money and then reneging just aren't the type to then go 20 years of scraping by so they can do so. Yes, there probably will be a few idiots out there who'll try it, but I think most will end up tempted by life itself to change in ways that bump them up past the 150% of poverty income. (Deciding they're sick of living on so little money, falling in love and getting married and/or deciding to start a family, etc.)

    Making it impossible for those who end up in bad situations through no fault of their own to get out from under their student loan debt just to prevent a few idiots from doing something like you suggested isn't a good solution. That's part of the reason we're having this mess now, we overreacted to the people who intentionally declared bankruptcy to get rid of student loans they never intended to pay and made it so people who were legitimately struggling could no longer get out from under them short of dying. Instead of being at either extreme, we need some middle ground.

  6. Re:What is really needed. by dontmakemethink · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At the very least it makes sure that everyone has proven their ability to waste their time and money instead of demonstrating independence and gaining life experience and then write the necessary boring reports if needed.

    FTFY. If you require a degree for a job that doesn't really need one, you're likely going to hire someone that only went to school to get the degree, barely paid attention as they jumped through the hoops, and doesn't have a clue how to apply their academic experience. Who the hell wants a staff full of debt-burdened carrot-chasers who couldn't get the job they really wanted? That's the most depressing scenario I've contemplated in recent memory. I wouldn't last a week in an environment like that. I would much rather depend upon people who are committed and grateful to gainfully apply their real-world experiences, degree or not.

    --

    War as we knew it was obsolete
    Nothing could beat complete denial
    - Emily Haines
  7. Re:Who says there is a loss? by Yold · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Interest is not purely profit. Interest is designed to offset inflation and the other ways you can spend your money. If I owed you $81,000 would you prefer that paid as a lump sum today or paid as a 0% interest loan over 25 years ($3,2400 /yr)?

    So in order to make $100,000 today equal to $100,000 in 25 years, we need interest (at least to cover inflation). So for the purposes of this loan $100,000 (at time 0) == $181,000 (at time 25). In addition to the interest, you pay portions of the $100,000 you borrowed. Each payment of $687 is an uneven mix of Interest payments and Principal payments, the ratio changes as the loan approaches time 25.

    So if you stop paying halfway through the loan, you may have paid in total $100,000 (combination of interest and principal). But $100,000 (at time 0) is less than $100,000 (at time 25), the lender loses money.