I am always amazed at the level of acceptance for these types of injustice there is in the US. Even here, most discussion is about the economics of college degrees, and how to deal with it on an individual level.
While the problem, it seems to me, is entirely one of political choice and justice, and the current situation seems very unfair. Young people from poorer backgrounds seem to be destined for slavery for a large part of their lives, unless they get extremely lucky.
People argue: but his degree is not worth it. On a meta-level that is simply impossible: the guy is a teacher, by definition in his lifetime he will produce much more to society than his education cost. If he can't reasonably pay of his loans the system cannot be fair. He was shortchanged and then punished for it.
Also it seems strange that 10 years after default he still has to pay rehabilitation and his debt is still growing. Is nobody in the US protecting people like him? I know in a situation like that where I live (NL) municipality instances will be all over you and your live will suck for 3 years, but after that your debt will be gone and you can start over.
My question is why hasn't he been able to land a full time teaching job in ~14 years? It seems like a full time teaching job would alleviate a lot of that pressure, but the article doesn't seem to mention it.
I understand teachers probably make the lowest salaries in any degree required field, but they can keep their heads above water if they are fully employed. Many family members are teachers, and it's noble but thankless work.
> I am always amazed at the level of acceptance for these types of injustice there is in the US. Even here, most discussion is about the economics of college degrees, and how to deal with it on an individual level.
You gotta give Americans a bit more credit than that. American attitudes are cultivated in a very different context. Yes, in a place like Germany, the government mostly pays for your school. The flip side is a lot more government control over peoples’ choices to make the system sustainable. We had an au pair from Germany. Very bright young woman, but a late bloomer academically. She was put into a non-college track in high school, and doesn’t have much in the way of other options in Germany (although, she had a white collar office job because those are attainable without college).
In the US, the government doesn’t pay, but also doesn’t restrict who can go to college, impose quotas on what degrees colleges can grant, etc. If people want to take on a bunch of debt, it’s their choice and they can deal with the consequences.
You can go to at any age, or start by attending in night courses in open university, in most EU countries. There exist also private schools where you pay for full tuition.
In the US, most institutions like banks use it as an opportunity to take money. The government is filled with folks who either want to help or are actively hostile, but that ends up with the actual government response being indifferent at best as neither side can force their will
Most scorn of universities and loan programs never seem to address a serious problem: Students taking on debt to fund degrees with little market value, or few job prospects. Racking up $100k to get an interdisciplinary degree in women and gender studies might sound awesome, but not at the cost of a school like NYU.[0] I think schools should be required to press upon students prior to taking out these loans honest and factual statistics about their future job prospects, needs for advanced education, and the average graduates ability to pay back the loan.
I think the colleges should have some skin in the game and be at least partially on the hook if the loan defaults. That should prevent some of the completely egregious price gouging.
At the lower end, they are. If their default rate gets too high, the school loses access to federal funding altogether. Of course, places like NYU have excellent programs with valuable degrees to balance out the defaults among the less valuable degrees. Plus their graduates in those less valuable programs also are far more likely to have wealthy families to support them and certainly have more ability to go on to grad school, resetting their default risk somewhat. So really it's only super scammy, low end, primarily for-profit schools who are at risk of losing their access to federal funds. And even that is a super low bar.
This is really the only path forward: make student debt dischargable. Yes, it will make less people go to college, but too many people going to college is clearly one of the root causes of cyclical skyrocketing costs and increased borrowing.
How would reducing the costs of going to college drive down the number of people going to college?
To clarify what I mean: If student loan debt is dischargeable, that means that taking out a loan for college is actually less risky. We should expect more people to do it, not fewer.
It makes loan itself more risky and thus more expensive. Fewer people will take loans at, say, 22% APR (a good rate for unsecured loan) than at the current rate (3-7%?).
Companies comfortable offering loans to risky candidates will feel far less comfortable doing so.
There is because there is some point where the ratio between amount of money requested, and expected postgraduate earnings for the chosen degree, would make for a bad deal due to the likelihood of default.
It’s less risky for students, but loan providers won’t want to overextend themselves to accomodate institutions who promise students the moon and demand sums they won’t be able to repay to “give” it to them.
Most student loans come from the federal government, and the rates are fixed regardless of risk. So what you and parent are really suggesting is increasing interest rates on student loans, which I totally support. Getting the government out of the student loan business so that the rates can be determined by markets would seem a good first step.
I agree with this. I really think most people are better off being hired and trained on-site for their careers. Students who show tremendous promise make more sense to attend a university, and that should just be federally funded.
If we reduce college attendance drastically, it may be necessary to maintain high end (cutting edge) universities. Otherwise only those with promise and wealth could go.
Because colleges in this hypothetical would serve the common good and the population as a whole would benefit from it's existence. How are you proposing colleges be funded?
They're currently funded many different ways: federal grants, federally subsidized loans, government (both state and federal) subsidized savings accounts, state funds, various scholarship charities, loan forgiveness programs, endowments, etc. Seems like centralizing all that money and decision-making ability into the hands of the President and the U.S. Congress would be a net loss.
I can't say this is true for all Universities, but accounting for inflation, at the University of Washington the cost to educate one student is the lowest it has ever been. So at least at one school they have been working hard at keeping costs down. Unfortunately, we keep reducing state funding to public schools, and the proportion of that cost born by the student is now much higher. Gone are the days that you could work your way through a state college, and it is not because the schools are price gouging.
I agree students shouldn't be taking on the loans they do for worthless degrees but I'd like to add that 17/18 years old is just not old enough to (1) decide what you want to do for the rest of your life and (2) begin taking dozens of thousands of $ in bankruptcy-immune loans to pay for it. There's also the issue of the cost of college being an artificial grossly expensive racket. If the opportunity for moneyed interests to milk kids of every cent because of the kids' and parents' blind desire for collegiate status and opportunity then they will, because this is America.
I agree, but I would say that's not the real problem here. Take the story in the article for example. My guess is that guy majored in English, and he did it because he understands it and likes it.
That should be fine and enough because there is value in English; he's a teacher, he's definitely gonna produce a TON of value over his lifetime for society (and, discussion over fair wages for teachers aside, enough money). More than the $35k debt he graduated with.
Or take the lady who has payed $63k towards her $8k original debt.
The problem here is that the student loan debt market is structured such that this value won't actually pay the debt. If they tie you in with perpetual debt, they can essentially "tax" you for the rest of your life, and because student debt is some sort of exception, there's nothing you can do to default out of it. What corporation wouldn't take the incentive for this essentially free, steady monthly income?
> I think schools should be required to press upon students prior to taking out these loans honest and factual statistics about their future job prospects, needs for advanced education, and the average graduates ability to pay back the loan.
I think schools should be required to justify why imparting a gender studies education costs $100k. Apart from professor salaries (maybe $80k/yr for a public uni in a a major metro area) and classrooms/whiteboard markers/projectors (already paid for, but figure equivalent of $15k/year) what exactly is that money going toward?
We in industry can also help by not valuing the university "name" so highly, and saying so loudly and often. If the job market was kinder to applicants from institutions of lesser-renown, we'd have fewer students willing to go into crazy debt to get into a prestigious school. I acknowledge that software is actually pretty good about this but other industries are not.
Interdisciplinary degree in women and gender studies are a minisculle percentage of all degrees out there. So is antropology.
If you want to make the argument that students are mostly picking wrong degrees, make it with one that is actually prevalent. Not the one that is fashionable among rich kids you personally despise.
but also, if every single student majored in computer science, the market value of that degree would plummet. it's not like everyone will be rich if everyone does the same thing. also, a society without variety would be a sad thing.
If you do some kind of investment (say, in stocks of some company), you first read up on investment, the market this company works in, products this company is planning etc. in particular if you go in debt for this investment.
So why can't one simply expect from grown-up people to do the same for the degree that ones planes do get?
The parents may be more experienced, but they are, for the most part, just as naive.
They grew up in a world where a bachelor's degree - any bachelor's degree - virtually guaranteed at least a middle class lifestyle, if not an upper middle class one. Many of them can't fathom the idea of graduating from college and then not being able to find a job that pays a living wage. Especially the ~2/3 of them who don't hold bachelor's degrees themselves.
> Many of them can't fathom the idea of graduating from college and then not being able to find a job that pays a living wage.
It is not only about finding a job (I believe with a "sensible" degree you will always find one), but about finding a job that pays well enough so that beside the costs of living (which are enormous in some regions) also the college debts can be paid back in a reasonable time.
There is no workable definition of "sensible" here. A number of my friends graduated with journalism degrees in 2007. They couldn't find jobs in journalism. This probably seems obvious to you now, that journalism is not a "sensible" degree, but in 2002-2004 when we were choosing schools and degrees, every major city had two or more competing newspapers with healthy entry level hiring. The world changed. That happens. It is happening to some set of degrees right now, but we don't yet know what they are. Maybe computer science degrees will not be "sensible" in 2021.
My point is just that a solution to this problem that requires teenagers and their parents to accurately predict the future of a complex society is not actually a solution at all.
On the other hand, I don't think you can ignore the financials. It's not about "useful vs useless." All courses of study are useful. People are getting saddled with piles of debt that they can't manage, though, and US law doesn't allow you to declare bankruptcy from your student loans, so people can potentially end up screwed for life. Against that kind of a backdrop, to blithely charge students whatever tuition they're willing to pay, regardless of whether or not they can expect to be able to pay it, is heartless.
So then the question arises, how do you increase the chances that nobody gets shackled with unmanageable debt for life? Changing the earning power conferred by different majors is a possibility. But, capitalism being what it is, that's going to require either changing the demand for those skills, or changing the supply of people who have those skills. It's hard to imagine how the former can be managed without some sort of government subsidy.
There are myriad ways you could affect the supply side, though. Doing something to put universities on the hook for how much their students earn, such as having students pay a % of their income to their alma mater for a decade or two in lieu of all or part of their tuition, would certainly do it. Universities would hopefully respond by starting to limit the number of seats available in departments that feed into less lucrative career paths right quick, in order to make sure that every department is financially sustainable. That would, in turn, reduce the supply of people with those skills, which would translate into an upward trajectory in how much it costs to hire someone with those skills.
But what is that kind of approach, if not a distinctly capitalist riff on the idea of "delineating useful vs. useless degrees"?
I keep wanting to reply to your comment because it's a good one that seems like it deserves more than just an upvote. But I also don't want to take the time to write the kind of response you deserve. So I'm leaving this meta comment just to let you know you weren't shouting at the wind and to thank you for your thoughts, which I found very interesting.
I mean this is why you have Asian immigrant parents insisting that the only acceptable areas of study are premed, prelaw, and (more recently) engineering. Some will refuse to pay for tuition unless their children agree.
(I think there's a famous anecdote by Bobby Jindal where his father told him that he could be anything he wanted to be -- any kind of doctor that is)
This is also the kind of environment that I am used to. Even though university education is mostly free in Germany, there are still costs of living etc. Thus there exist quite some children whose parents are quite hesitant to pay for the education of them if they don't agree with the degree course that the child chooses - even though by law they are typically required to pay.
Parents are required to support their children into their adulthood in Germany? That doesn't sound likely, but then, I'm not German.
Edit: found a reference that says parents must support children until they are 21 or have a profession to support themselves (presumably whichever is sooner -- I hope!).
> Parents are required to support their children into their adulthood in Germany? That doesn't sound likely, but then, I'm not German.
> Edit: found a reference that says parents must support children until they are 21 or have a profession to support themselves (presumably whichever is sooner -- I hope!).
if the child studies at a university, the parents have to pay for them until it gets its master's degree (which is typically much longer than up to the 21 years of age). There are exceptions, such as if the parents can prove that the child does not concentrate on his studies or if it changes the degree course "too often" etc. But assume that the normal case is that the parents have to support the child up to master's degree.
Neither of my parents went to college. I actually missed filling out FAFSA my first year because I didn’t even know it existed. I took the SAT late for a similar reason (I knew it existed but I though you take it your senior year of high school). The parents of first generation college attendees are ill equipped to help. Their advice was effectively go to some college at all costs.
It’s interesting that the real perpetrators don’t get much of Taibbi’s scorn. The loan industry are just opportunists, and for the most part students loans have been taken over by the government anyway.
The real criminals here are teachers, parents, and employers, who have created a culture where people are compelled to get completely unnecessary higher education. Here, you need a college degree to be an administrative assistant in an office. In Germany, in contrast, young people can get many white collar jobs after age 16, plus three years of apprenticeships during which they get paid.
I mean, the loan industry still does deserve scorn when they make loans that hurt society rather than help. They should at least strive to focus their efforts on deals where everybody wins, especially when the taxpayer is the one who foots the bill when they lose.
I do agree that our education system is the most at fault, though I would make administrators as criminals before teachers. Administrators are the ones who continually spend their schools' funds on pretty buildings, sports teams, and raising their own salaries. That money could be used to develop better educational methodologies, raise teacher salaries (in the case of K-12 where viable STEM professionals would be taking a giant pay cut compared to industry), and improve the quality/quantity of resources that students really need to succeed (not a new football stadium).
Parents and employers are typically reacting to this environment, not generating it. Employers require more education due to the failures of K-12 and some universities. Parents try to recognize what their kids will need to get a fulfilling career (we hope), though they may lack the understanding to do so effectively.
> the loan industry still does deserve scorn when they make loans that hurt society rather than help. They should at least strive to focus their efforts on deals where everybody wins, especially when the taxpayer is the one who foots the bill when they lose.
Lenders don’t have a choice. Student loans are originated without regard to ability to repay. Indeed, today, lenders are just responsible for servicing and refinancing—the federal government handles all loan origination.
It’s the quintessentially American way of solving problems in the most expensive way possible. Instead of actually addressing social and racial injustices. we tell disadvantaged people to go to college and then make it illegal to deny them outrageous student loans on the basis of their financial ability to repay. The primary beneficiaries are, of course, the petit bourgeoisie—school professors, administrators, etc.
You're right about the gratuitous overbuilding, administrative bloat and salaries, but at most schools athletics is a self-funding enterprise, via ticket sales, advertising and sponsorships, merchandise, and donations.
Quoting the article: "Going to college doesn't guarantee a good job, far from it, but the data show that not going dooms most young people to an increasingly shallow pool of the very crappiest, lowest-paying jobs. There's a lot of stick, but not much carrot, in the education game. [...] the squeeze on the un-degreed grows tighter, increasing further that original negative incentive: Don't go to college, and you'll be standing on soup lines by age 25. "
The article itself explains why teachers and parents and students themselves still seek degree - because alternative is nothing good either.
It is competitions and if you dont compete, you loose for sure.
It's still possible to make a good living in a skilled trade. Welder, electrician, pipe fitter, etc. Especially if you're entrepreneurial and can start your own business after getting some experience. It requires education and hard work but not college.
Their point is that you don't need to go to college to be a software developer, and if you're trying to say that you need to be Bill Gates-level lucky to get away with that, that's a really dubious argument.
The problem will he solved once there are no more young people. We already have less then two children per couple on average, so it is getting there.
Then again, if your logic makes you claim that majority of population is wrong for having children (including lower middle class and employed honest workers) then maybe the problem is elsewhere.
Agree. If an economy is structured where the population can't even sustain itself, that's a sign of a huge systemic problem. People sure like to parrot that though.
Well between birth and college life might happen that reduces income - consider injury, illness, or death.
Personally, I don't think parents should pay for higher education. I wouldn't have taken mine seriously if I weren't paying for it myself. It gave me a healthy dose of the value of money.
The employers are free to require whatever they'd like for a job. But the teachers and parents are often uneducated on the topic themselves and parrot the prevailing wisdom that a college degree is essential.
Neither of my parents have a college degree, but they were insistent that their children got one - any one. It's the prevailing blue collar logic and it's hard to shake it when you're surrounded by it.
Interestingly, Germany had a push over the last thirty years or so towards requiring higher education for jobs that have historically never needed that.
As an example, a large chunk of my classmates did not study after the Abitur (which is the qualification for university studies and can be received with about 18 from the Gymnasium – our highest secondary school). Many went to local banks and became bank tellers and back office workers.
Bank tellers used to have "Mittlere Reife", which you get at the Realschule (in the middle of secondary schools) with about 16. There are still bank tellers with Mittlere Reife, but since the banks can choose to get young people with Abitur, they do so.
Becoming a baker or a joiner used to be the domain of young people who graduated from the Hauptschule – the lowest of the secondary schools. Today, many are from the Realschule.
Still, the apprenticeship system works, even if the standards have been raised.
Even more interesting to young people who think about going to college (because that's the audience we're talking about here) is the "dual system", where they study half of the time, but with lower academic expectations (less theorizing, more practical learning), and spend the other half in a company where they can immediately put their new knowledge to practice. They are paid by the company (enough to move out from home) and are obligated to work at that company after graduation for a few years. It is quite a bit like apprenticeship, but for white-collar jobs.
It is less prestigious than studying at a university, but companies love those students, because they are well-integrated into the company from the beginning, and some of those students do have rather fast careers afterwards.
> Still, the apprenticeship system works, even if the standards have been raised.
The standards for these jobs surely have raised a litle - but mostly the standards of Hauptschulabschluss and Realschulabschluss (I don't know how to translate these words into English) have declined. Things that every graduate of a Hauptschule, say, 40-50 years ago, had to know, say, in writing German text or numeracy, can not be assumed anymore. So the problem in my opinion mostly lies in the decline of standards in schools instead of new, harder requirements to become an apprentice.
And another way of looking at things is this problem would not exist if the government did not pass special rules that affect student loans, and only student loans.
I think there are lots of sources of failure that lead up to the problem, but the vast majority are of good intentions. It's not hard to see why the government decided to create special rules. It enabled lenders to all but completely ensure profit on loans meaning that anybody would have access to university, regardless of financial background. And that's a good thing.
Parents and teachers are also acting with good intentions. I would fully recommend college to anybody. I would certainly recommend move to Europe for it now a days, but the value of an education is immense. Access to the resources (physical, personnel, and intangible) of a campus is something that can open up vast new possibilities for an individual. And being around a more competitive group of individuals than you'd experience in high school can help ensure people stand a better chance of reaching their full potential.
And then there are employers. Today in the US it's somewhat paradoxical that we have a genuinely low unemployment rate yet also most decent job offers get more resumes than employers can handle. All other things being equal, a person with a college background is going to be more desirable than somebody without one. So why not require it and cut those CVs down to a more manageable size?
Perhaps the only people acting in bad faith are lenders. But like you mentioned they're just opportunists. And cognitive dissonance is a hell of a drug. They're not exploiting anybody. They're providing equal access to education for everybody in mutually beneficial agreements. At least that's what they'll convince themselves of.
What I'm getting at here is that trying to point fingers at one person or another isn't really productive. Who cares who's fault it is? There's a problem that needs fixing is all that matters.
> Who cares who's fault it is? There's a problem that needs fixing is all that matters.
I care. We can't properly address the problem or learn from our mistakes if we don't know the cause.
We had colleges before federal student loan subsidies. Our parents went to school and paid for tuition with part time jobs. Then we had them, and decades later, the chickens have come home to roost. This is not rocket science--it's Economics 101.
We are letting bad ideas off the hook by not focusing on what the problem is, and as long as we let people pass blame, we can expect to continue seeing it again and again.
Determining a cause and attributing responsibility are not the same. One can argue that just about everybody is responsible:
- Government giving special laws that are able to be abused.
- Lenders utilizing said laws to maximize their personal benefit
- Universities raising costs far outside of any notion of need
- Students taking out loans they can't repay
- Parents/schools encouraging students to go to college, even for low value degrees
- Employers requiring degrees for jobs that don't really require them.
And while each of these can be attacked, they can be just as easily defended. When you try to attribute blame, it's going to end up being horribly subjective and more like to turn into a witch hunt than anything else. And it's also going to be incredibly partisan. For instance people who chose to not attend university would completely understandably prefer to blame students. Students who went to university would probably prefer to blame universities or lenders. Who's right? There's no objective answer.
What is clear is the cause of the problem -- students are taking out loans that will not be able to be reasonably paid back. And so too are there plenty of solutions. Blame plays no part other than to divide people.
Sure--I read the parent comment. I have no doubt there will always be someone else people blame when liberal policies fail, but lenders, universities, students, parents, and employers acting rationally in their own self-interest is not some strange unforeseeable possibility.
We have to be able to acknowledge when bad ideas don't work well. This is one of those times.
Ah okay! I must have misunderstood you. The implication (to me) of seeking to attribute blame was the typical game of trying to pick the most apparently malevolent actor, not actually thinking about why we failed to foresee quite foreseeable consequences in the past. I'd completely agree that trying to figure out why we didn't foresee this (to help us prevent making such mistakes in the future) would be very helpful.
First is that all colleges are not the same,with some colleges offering next to no marginal benefit vs. a high school diploma. Which means there are huge price discrepancies based on quality (DeVry ~$16k/year online vs Ucal @ ~14k/year on campus (instate)).
Also not addressed is mean salary of entry level jobs in your area of study - is it worth spending 100k to get a an accounting degree from a decent program where you can probably get an entry level job that pays $50k? Probably. Same $100k on a degree in social work where the entry level job is $30k? Maybe not?
For kids preparing for college lucky enough to read these comments, and parents with kids preparing to go to college, consider this advice:
1. Always go in-state public funded college and university, it's much, much cheaper. In-state meaning the state the student is currently a resident.
2. If you must go out of state, make sure the student registers as a state resident after their first year (most states require a year waiting period). This way, you only pay out-of-state tuition for a year. Generally out of state tuitions are 4x or so higher than in-state (it's been a while since I've examined this, so it might be higher or lower).
3. The cheapest path is to get your AA degree at in-state public community college, then your remaining 2 years at university. Not only is this cheaper, but this allows the student two years to decide their major after some realistic exposure to the various fields and what they pay.
4. Never attend private colleges without a scholarship, unless you are wealthy. There are two types of private colleges: old and new. The older colleges like Harvard, etc are expensive but bona fide, then new private colleges like ITT Tech, Trump university, etc are generally scammy schools that spend way more on marketing than education. Stay away from these at all costs, they are traps.
5. Make no mistake, a college education is a huge leg up in the marketplace for jobs. It's no guarantee, but not having one is much, much worse, and will be more so in the future. We live in a service economy, and service jobs require degrees for the most part.
6. If your field requires a Master's or Ph.D to be employed, that is a big red flag, and you should consider another field. This requirement generally means the field is supersaturated with applicants so much that employers can require an advanced degree for hiring and it's very difficult to not only land the first job, but also move to different employers. Remember, you have 40 years of work in your lifetime.
7. Outside of perhaps Ivy League, the college you attend doesn't matter. Employers generally want to check a box that says you've earned a degree in your relevant field and that's it.
You can combine it with point 3: attend community college the first 2 years then transfer. I know at least some CA community colleges let you become an instate student after your first year and even out-of-state tuition at a community college isn't that expensive. In the Bay Area you're likely to pay more in rent than tuition at a community college.
8. Consider studying somewhere with relatively miniscule tuition fees. Parts of Europe, for example. There are universities teaching in English and charging a couple of thousand Euros a term, or even less.
I sometimes think about taking a year or two off to do that just for the fun of it.
It seems like the root problem is that students cannot declare bankruptcy on student loans. If they could do that then lenders would adjust for risk accordingly which would lower the availability of loans, which would in turn drive tuition down. I know there's an argument that students will just declare bankruptcy after graduating, but if that's the case then the solution would be to make bankruptcy less appealing via disincentives (more penalties for declaring bankruptcy).
Making student loans exempt from bankruptcy is distorting the loan markets and, in turn, tuition. If restricting the availability of loans creates a situation in which the higher education is unavailable to students without financial means, then the state should make free or very low cost higher education available to offset this. The solutions are so obvious that it's pretty clear that the financing of student loans is a giant con at this point.
Alternate suggestion: Force all endowment gains from investments to be applied towards lowering student tuition until tuition is free, then the school can happily invest to their heart’s content.
It could still probably be gamed to some extent but would at least prevent the somewhat disgusting situation of stacking tens of millions yearly into endowment funds while gutting the futures of students by raising tuition
if students could declare bankruptcy there would probably be no student loans. there are already very few private loans available to students without substantial credit history or a cosigner. how could the numbers possibly work out?
to graduate in four years from a state university (paying in-state tuition) costs about $44k. a typical college freshman has close to zero assets and no credit. if they have any income, it's probably a part-time minimum wage job. assuming they don't qualify for any aid, these people need to borrow about $10k each year and likely won't pay any of it back until they get a degree.
now let's pause for a moment. how many ways can you get an unsecured $10k loan with limited to no credit history? they basically don't exist. you would need to build credit for a long time before you got a limit anywhere near that on a credit card, and their whole business model revolves around loaning people more money than they should.
now consider that in the US, about 40% of students fail to get their bachelors in 6 years. obviously these people will not be able to use the degree to obtain employment, and probably will not ever pay down the debt in full unless they enter a lucrative trade that didn't require the degree in the first place. if we assume that the students who graduate are able to repay the loan, they have to pay a significant amount of interest before the lender breaks even on the group of loans. and keep in mind that there's no guarantee that a student who graduates has acquired a degree that actually improves their earning potential.
so tl;dr: it is really hard to offer a reasonable loan of that size to an 18yo with no skills/assets who stands a substantial chance of either not finishing or finishing with a valueless (to the market) degree.
You used to be able to discharge student loans through bankruptcy and guess what?? The sky didn't fall down.
However, that was also when a year of college could be paid for by a minimum-wage summer job. Now it's egregiously expensive AND they've got you by the balls.
the last time you could discharge student loans in bankruptcy without satisfying special conditions was 1976 in the US. but that was a time where an undergrad degree was relatively cheap, and not many people took out loans in the first place.
I don't disagree that something is seriously messed up in this country's higher education system, but the discharge exemption for student loans is probably one of the few things that keeps the system even slightly economic. like I said above, you cannot just lend huge chunks of money to kids without making any risk assessment and also allow them to default whenever. at least, you can't do this unless your intention is to lose money.
if I had to have a guess, I would say that the main contributor to our outrageous education costs is the government making all these uneconomic loans in the first place.
Because of government loan guarantees, the cost of tuition will eventually rise to match the entire net present value of the expected lifetime earnings premium. This could easily be in the millions.
Also, we can expect income-based repayment to become the norm, since most will not be able to afford the payments
They aren’t just government loan guarantees any more: They’re government loans. The government has essentially taken over the undergraduate loan business.
I don’t think the political implications of a significant fraction of 23 year-olds owing $50,000+ to the Federal government have been fully thought through. For one, it’s a huge policy lever. We’ll forgive your loans or reduce your payments if...
I'm kind of fond of the idea of people paying a percentage of their income after they get their degree and for X number of years.
I think that's a fantastic idea. For needed professions, it could be X - Y number of years. Inexpensive and attainable education would be a good thing, I should imagine.
This is sort of how it works in the UK. You pay 9% of what you earn over £X for 25 years (with X and other details like interest depending on when you started borrowing).
In theory, this stops when you pay off your loan, but the most recent estimate I know of[0] predicts that 60% of graduates under the current system will never get there, so while it's technically a loan, it feels more like a graduate tax.
As the price of college he lists the sticker price, not the price after whatever deal is worked out (it is often quite significantly less).
But that is a nit. It is a very real, very big, problem. A country needs an educated work force. But the vultures have turned that need into pure profit, at a great cost to people just trying to have a good life.
> As the price of college he lists the sticker price, not the price after whatever deal is worked out (it is often quite significantly less).
I’m not sure to which “deals” you are referring. When I went to college I paid the sticker price for tuition and then some (for housing, books, administrative fees, etc.). I feel like this is another harmful myth that scholarships and grants significantly lower the cost of college when, in reality, for most students they don’t.
I think the OP’s point is that the money a college spends per student does not equal the tuition sticker price (it may be higher or lower), and the average price incurred (cash tuition + debt incurred) for the student is often less then the sticker price...
Yes, thanks. I know that the pricing situation is nuts, everyone knows it is nuts (I'm a prof, but not at all involved in admissions or financial aid). The model is to list a large sticker price and give a lot of that back.
My college's web site is an example. https://www.smcvt.edu/admissions/financial-aid-and-tuition/t... (I understand that all schools in the US have to have such a page.) It lists the bottom-line summary of the sticker price and then gives you a link to a calculator that you use to figure what it will really cost you, which is typically much less. For example, overall we give back more than half and I assume that our peer institutions do also.
(And, yes, a loan is different than a grant, which is different than work study. My only point is that the end price is often much less than the sticker price.)
All this is not to say that the point of the article is wrong. It is not wrong. I said it was a nit, and I meant that.
All accredited colleges in the US are required to provide tuition information - we had to put a ‘Net Price Calculator’ on our website. There are actually a bunch of student notices required by the government and accreditation groups.
Are you sure you didn't have a $500 something in there, so they could claim 95% receive financial aid? I did.
Of course sticker price takes into account that they're granting virtually everyone $500. This was the game in the early 90's; I'm sure it has grown since then.
The lead of this article is very hyperbolic. Even if a person competely defaults and allows default judgement against them, the maximum allowed penalty is a garnishment of 15% of income after tax. On a salary of $18,000 that would be at most $2,700 or $225 a month. That will be a never ending payment, but it's hardly time to go seppuku.
Aside from the hyperbole, I do think the article has a fair point. And there's a very simple solution. Align the interests of lenders with borrowers. There are a lot of ways to do this. One would be to enable borrowers to declare bankruptcy meaning lenders would not be throwing money around like beads at Mardis Gras.
Another option is to change the terms of students loans to be as special as their permanence is. Require student loans be paid back in terms of x% of income for the x% of years after graduation. This would heavily incentivize loan agencies into ensuring a college education does actually lead to a good job. The reduction in lending would also reduce the cost of education as a whole. As the article mentions, the bloating in tuition and other rates is mostly just a factor of greed. If you offer a product valued as practically priceless, and a consumer's available income is x then your price is going to approach x. 'Mardi gras lenders' push x higher and higher to no end.
Ultimately there are lots of solutions. But I expect we'll do nothing. As the 15% I mentioned above gaurantees that even 'bad loans' are good, from the perspective of a lender. Even if somebody gets stuck working in aggregate $30k jobs (inflation adjusted) for the next 50 years, that's $1.5 million with 15% there equaling out to $225k. That's an extremely healthy profit even on defaults. To New Orleans we go!
Default would tank your credit score and possibly jepordize future job, housing, and banking opportunities. Even if it's brutal, I think it's better to avoid default if at all possible.
Completely agreed which is why I think it's bizarre that the loans cannot be dismissed. Bankruptcy has similar effects and lasts for 10 years! The reason I mention it is he was talking about $471/month with 0 principal progress on a salary of $18,000 was driving him to literal suicide. At that point taking the 15% and consequences is undoubtedly a better solution.
It's an interesting conundrum (for my family at least). My father was very highly educated (Professor Emeritus of semiconductor physics/EE at a major University, you've likely heard of it). I started out putting a couple of years in toward a BSCE at that same University, but I abandoned it because I already had work experience, and the BSCE was just a consolation prize -- the only value it would have had is if I was going to pursue a doctorate/academic career. That would have come with a prospect of a lot of student debt. As it turned out, I ended up in a career making more than a trauma surgeon, but without a mountain of $250K student loans. Today, I have 6 kids, and the two oldest are at the ages where they need to contemplate college. One definitely has their sights on University, the other is ambivalent. What I tell all of them is that there is nothing wrong with wanting to become an Electrician, Plumber, Pipefitter or any of the other work trades. All are worthy careers and can be very lucrative.
Do the admin and faculty staff see a share of the returns in their salaries, or are there outside investors? Or is it more about ensuring a long-term and improving ability to pay for top researchers and fund cutting edge research, raising the university's profile?
How does anyone expect high school graduates to make responsible decisions regarding loans and choice of major when the overwhelming majority of his grads exit highschool financially illiterate, with the nonsensical idea that any college degree is good enough?
How many times have you heard the expression "do what you love, and the money will come?"
The culture in the U.S. is in dire need of a return to merit, as well as drastic changes to our education system; and, no, the answer is not more funding.
Also I believe that government aid should be restricted to degrees with a minimum relative ROI. Education for the sake of culture is no longer useful when you have an increasingly incompetent workforce.
While the problem, it seems to me, is entirely one of political choice and justice, and the current situation seems very unfair. Young people from poorer backgrounds seem to be destined for slavery for a large part of their lives, unless they get extremely lucky.
People argue: but his degree is not worth it. On a meta-level that is simply impossible: the guy is a teacher, by definition in his lifetime he will produce much more to society than his education cost. If he can't reasonably pay of his loans the system cannot be fair. He was shortchanged and then punished for it.
Also it seems strange that 10 years after default he still has to pay rehabilitation and his debt is still growing. Is nobody in the US protecting people like him? I know in a situation like that where I live (NL) municipality instances will be all over you and your live will suck for 3 years, but after that your debt will be gone and you can start over.