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Is Student Loan Debt The Next Financial Crisis?

There's no doubt that we're all still a little sensitive when it comes to the economy. Although it's been nearly four years since the start of, what we now call, The Great Recession, the world still hasn't let down its guard. The new warning making its way through the financial media is the rising student loan burden. Some believe that this could bring down the economy in much the same way as the 2008 and 2009 mortgage crisis, but is that true?

Background
For generations, young people have heard that the only path to success is through a college education. College remains the accepted path for 68.1% of high school graduates, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

For most students today, student loans are the way to pay the expenses of a higher education. The average student loan debt for a college student in 2010 was $25,250, up 5% from the previous year, according to a study by the Project on Student Debt. For the first time in history, total student-loan borrowing for one year surpassed the $100 billion mark in 2010, making the total outstanding debt more than $1 Trillion.

Some believe that the problem will continue to get worse. Over the past 50 years, the rate of college tuition inflation has ranged from about 6 to 9% annually, sometimes twice the normal rate of inflation. With college becoming more financially out of reach and the economy largely failing to put all of the college graduates to work, experts believe that more and more people will be unable to pay these loans.

Bankruptcy
The problem doesn't stop there. Current laws don't allow student loan debt to be written off by bankruptcy proceedings, regardless of how bad a person's financial situation becomes, so graduates who are bankrupt will likely continue to pay on their student loan debt. Some students with more than $100,000 in debt may pay the equivalent of house payment each month for sometimes more than twenty years.

Economists fear that as this problem continues to grow, traditional purchases like homes and other economy-stimulating activities could be largely stifled, impacting the growth of an already fragile economy.

This problem is much more than a theory. A recent survey found that around 50% of bankruptcy attorneys reported significant increases in clients who list student loan obligations as a significant financial burden. Another survey of the class of 2005 found that one out of every four became temporarily delinquent or haven't paid for a significant period of time.

The Fix
Bankruptcy attorneys believe that the only way to fix the problem is to allow for student loan debt to be discharged in the same way as credit card or other debt through bankruptcy proceedings. Some believe that this would be just another taxpayer bailout of the student loan industry but since a large portion of debt is through government agencies, much of the debt is already held by taxpayers. Others believe that college tuition inflation needs to be brought under control, but there is little hope for that in the near future.

The Bottom Line
There's no doubt that the student loan system is in desperate need of reform but comparing it to the mortgage crisis may be inaccurate. Although the total amount of outstanding student loans now stands at about $1 trillion, that number is small compared to the roughly $13.5 trillion in outstanding mortgage debt.



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88 comments

  • Success Nothing Less  •  2 months ago
    Yes it is the next bubble! As long as students can borrow money go to school and avoid working topay the money back, and as long tuition can be hiked every year with no explanation why, and as long as college administrations are allowed to not make public their budgets and expenses...........the bubble bust is imminent. I work in Fin Aid and it's a shame how college's use (and waste) Fed money.
    • shubox215 2 months ago
      Avoid? Let me tell you that when I received my bachelor's degree in 2000, I had 4 job offers. I was laid off two months after 9/11 and have struggled to get back on track ever since. In Bush's America, it was okay for Americans to earn less as long as they had jobs, and that's where I have been ever since. So now my only choice is to borrow more money to earn a master's degree with the hopes of getting back the salary I once earned with a bachelor's. Bush gave corporations tax breaks, and those companies took that savings and outsourced jobs overseas.
    • Mikeal 2 months ago
      I agree with you Shu, college graduates are NOT avoiding work; there is NO work for us due to corporate and political GREED! That is why REVOLUTION is in the air.
    • mi55anthropy 2 months ago
      I'm in the same boat with you, Shu. I received my B.A. in Communication, which I paid for MYSELF, in Dec. '98. I landed my first "real" job at a major media company in early '00 to the tune of a $36K salary with benefits (probably peanuts to most folks, but I was stoked!). I paid off both of my small student loans, then had the two large loans consolidated; I'd actually begun paying on the principal when I was "downsized" in Feb. '02. That began a sickening cycle of land-good-industry-job/get-"downsized" (branch closings, major accounts lost, whole divisions let go, etc., etc., ad nauseam) that lasted until the summer of '07; COBRA payments of $300+ per month each time I was unemployed (I bit the bullet and held on to my health insurance at any cost, because to be without it would've been a serious risk, in my case) ate up my tiny savings cushion completely. Now, years later, I'm working just under what my company deems full-time, for less than half of my last "real job's" salary (actually, I'm only earning a few bucks per hour above the state's minimum wage), in a field that has nothing to do with my major. I've got no benefits to speak of, because the branch's management refuses to give me the 2 extra hours per week that would afford me full-time status. Most humiliating here, though, is the fact that my dad's now taken over my student loan payments, because I don't earn enough to pay them back, anymore. Oh - and I had to move back in with my dad, because I can no longer afford rent. I WISH I could go back and get a Master's degree, because I'm wasting my Mensa IQ (and harming my health, to boot!) at my current job. Seems utterly hopeless... :(
  • ken  •  Tulsa, United States  •  2 months ago
    Has college become the path to poverty?
  • doclouie  •  Salt Lake City, United States  •  2 months ago
    The interest rates on loans are terrible. That is where they need to start first.
  • Troll194  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  2 months ago
    Higher education is big business even if the university claims to be "nonprofit". These universities make plenty of profit, they just spend it all on other things like salaries and bonuses etc., to make sure they dont mess up their "nonprofit" status by showing a profit. It is the next bubble...
    • RobH 2 months ago
      The salaries you speak of aren't made by everyone.When I taught college,I was paid less than a comparable public school teacher. I love football,but had I been a coach,we can only imagine the money. College presidents & administrators (just like public school) make MUCH larger salaries,so it really depends on what your job is and not that many TRUE teachers make large salaries in college.
    • Ben 2 months ago
      What a ridiculous complaint! Of course colleges spend the money they make on employee salaries, most of which are terribly low for people with professional degrees.
  • central scrutinizer  •  New Orleans, United States  •  2 months ago
    I thought smart people went to college.
    • Kirk 2 months ago
      some smart people are able to learn on their own and don't need that bought piece of paper.
    • Marsha 2 months ago
      People are being forced to go in debt by people who hire only by degree and not intellegence and knowledge.
  • O.G.  •  Cicero, United States  •  2 months ago
    I was a late bloomer. I wasn't able to attend college until I was over 30. For me, student loans were my only recourse. I'm #$%$ near retirement now, and I'm still paying back those loans. They remain a top priority for me, because without them I would have been doomed to a job that I hated. I can't help but consider others who would share a similar fate if funds for student loans dry up.
    • mi55anthropy 2 months ago
      I had to wait until I was 24 and qualified as an "independent" student to be able to get my student loans. I can't even afford to pay back my loans now, however. I've been forced to take a myriad of jobs that I've hated, including the one I've currently got, just to pay the bills. Sadly, these jobs *don't* actually pay the bills...
  • driftwood00  •  Southfield, United States  •  2 months ago
    I was 10 grand in debt just to attend a community college and get my Associates Degree, but I have worked my #$%$ off to pay it down and now only owe around 3 grand, it can be done, but only use your loans when you need to. People take the max every time they get a chance and the next thing you know their debt is so high they will never get it paid off.
  • Rudolph A  •  2 months ago
    Ha kids don't go into $70,000 debit for an art degree. It's not going to pay for it self.

    Here is a money saving college tip. Spend the first two years at a local community college to knock out your core classes, then transfer to a 4 year college to complete your degree. You will save 40-50% of the cost.
  • Charles  •  2 months ago
    Yes, but there are properties and houses for that mortgage debt - in a word, assets (even if many of those assets are "underwater" at present, there is still enormous value). For student loan debt, there is nothing tangible that can be exchanged or sold. So, student loan debt is not exactly comparable to mortgage debt, and more worrisome for this reason because it is not associated with any tangible asset.

    Education is a Human Right. People shouldn't have to gamble with their futures to get an education. Make state universities free, and pay for it with progressive taxation. People who do well by their educations will pay it forward with fair taxation. We used to do that in America until the 1980s - before California started spending $billions on prisons and cutting $billions from the budget for universities.
  • Rectal Bisque  •  Encino, United States  •  2 months ago
    Maybe if they stopped the California DREAM ACT which steals my tax money and GIVES IT to the children of illegal immigrants?
  • Atomon  •  2 months ago
    I paid my student loans, but then, I deferred gratification. I waited on buying a car, I waited on buying a home, and I waited on buying the stereo components I wanted. All that stuff waited until the majority of my debt had been cleared. THEN I saved for a down on a car, and once I had the car, I started saving for a down on a home. Sometimes you must prioritize.
  • Michael  •  2 months ago
    I owe about $ 42,000 consolidated through Department of Ed at 5.37 % APR. Monthly is 278. I will have paid double that when all is said and done
  • Onebellplaza  •  2 months ago
    So do we raise my taxes to pay off everyone's debt until .....I go BK.
  • RobH  •  Waynesboro, United States  •  2 months ago
    My experience...I worked to put myself through college and only took out loans when I absolutely could not pay for tuition at that time. There were times when I cut back to part-time in college & even dropped out for a while to save more money to go back to school. It took me 6 years to complete my B.A. & 2 years for my masters. At the end of my 1st year towards my doctorate, I went into the Army & they paid my college loans off while I served.
    Unfortunately due to family situations, I was unable to finish the doctorate but I've always had a job even if not in my degree field. What I saw around me in college were other students taking out massive amounts of student loans. They bought expensive clothes, cars, gym memberships, partying, etc. It concerns me that these loans might be "forgiven".
    It will only encourage others to do abuse the system.
  • FreedomHawk  •  Carol Stream, United States  •  2 months ago
    Mortgage debt they actually have something of value they’re paying off. A degree in a lot of majors isn’t worth the sheepskin it’s written on. Being a Debt Slave to a piece of paper is no fun at all! The government giving out Student Loans to anyone with a heartbeat is what caused tuition to skyrocket. Didn’t they learn a lesson with the housing bubble? If the government gave every kid out of high school a loan for $30K to buy an SUV, what do you think would happen to the price of SUV’s? That’s right, SUV’s would skyrocket in price. Doesn’t anyone in our government understand simple economics??? The Free Market isn't perfect but it's much better than government fools trying to pick winners and losers.
  • Kevin  •  Al Urmån, Egypt  •  2 months ago
    Welcome for profit colleges folks. The next make a few people rich scheme on the backs of the rest of us. Savings and loan crisis, housing crisis, student loan crisis. Welcome to America. Find a scam, get in on it early, leave your damage for the taxpayers. Gotta love being an American.
  • Jack Trip  •  2 months ago
    My wife and I had $50K in student loans back in 1995. As soon as we got good jobs we started paying off the loans. We did not keep up with the Jone's and buy expensive things and nice cars. We lived modestly and started making large payments to our student debt. By the time the housing bubble was busting in 2007, our student loans were paid off. We were told from the beginning that you could never get out of the student loan debt. Well there was one option: DEATH.
  • Kirk  •  2 months ago
    IMO This was all set up to get this foolish generation to become indentured servents. They have been slowly nipping away at freedoms. Good Luck to you all -
  • Norm  •  2 months ago
    Achievement is low in many places because school districts, states and universities want total control of the teachers, instructors and volunteers. No one is allowed to teach anything unless it is part of a framework or lesson plan, has been sanitized and does not conflict with higher education's monopoly on learning. Any knowledge or skill that would rob colleges and universities of huge tuition money opportunities is banned. If brilliant people don't have the prescribed, degrees or certifications and can be controlled and monitored, their talent and skill will go unused and the great, independent minds will be left to gnash his teeth.
  • merlin  •  Lebanon, United States  •  2 months ago
    Furthering your education for a lot of Americans means paying on student loans until you retire which is ridiculous. Colleges and universities never look for ways to keep costs down for their students as it is BIG Business for them.
 
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