BaptistDave1
Member
Been thinking about student loan crisis and why so many are defaulting. I have been talking to people about this, particularly people who are paying their student loans and a few who have defaulted. The problem doesn’t seem to be that they don’t want to pay back their loans. I have not run into anyone that is in favor of student loan forgiveness, amazingly enough. What they want is for the government to reduce the interest on the payments so that they are reasonable.
Right now, a person can get out of college with a loan at 12% -15% and payments around $450 after the 6-month grace period. Few employers, and I mean very few, are offering recent college grads any kind of job that is more than an entry level position at a company and they don’t pay enough for someone to rent, pay on a car and ay pother living expenses and be able to afford the monster payments the government is asking them to make on their student loans. Entry level positions pay around $20,000 a year (give or take) at least in my neck of the woods. I know some who don’t make $18K on an entry-level job as a college grad.
At our rent prices around here, you cannot rent, pay on a car and be able to save for retirement, save for emergency car repairs AND pay off student loans at the rate the government wants the loans paid back. That’s why students are defaulting. They cannot afford the payments. It’s not a case of wanting us to pay it for them. They want a good credit report because they want to buy a house. They get the need to pay back loans. They don’t want to live irresponsibly.
So, I think that the solution, what would go a long way, is to make the payments affordable by lowering the interest on the loans. I pay 2% on my car loan and the bank is not hurting. The government needs to lower the payments by lowering the interest and lower it dramatically and then cap it.
I would also add that we need to cap the tuition rates that universities are charging. The cost for students at major universities is immense and these schools get away with it because they get paid by the government.
As it stands, even though you can get income-based payment plans, what others have told me is that the lower payments don’t even pay off the full amount of interest, much less any of the principle. So, while they are making payments, they are in effect, still going further into debt with each payment. The only good thing is that as long as they make the payments, they protect their credit score, but are stuck renting an apartment. That’s not how it should work.
I think that students really need to think realistically about the kind of job they will get out of college and consider not going to the most expensive colleges. You can end up with $100,000 in student loan debt just for a four year degree that is the same degree offered at less expensive colleges.
The student loan crisis needs to be addressed in terms of getting universities to charge less and the government charging less interest. In truth, we need to privatize student loans through the banks and get the government out of the student loan business.
Right now, a person can get out of college with a loan at 12% -15% and payments around $450 after the 6-month grace period. Few employers, and I mean very few, are offering recent college grads any kind of job that is more than an entry level position at a company and they don’t pay enough for someone to rent, pay on a car and ay pother living expenses and be able to afford the monster payments the government is asking them to make on their student loans. Entry level positions pay around $20,000 a year (give or take) at least in my neck of the woods. I know some who don’t make $18K on an entry-level job as a college grad.
At our rent prices around here, you cannot rent, pay on a car and be able to save for retirement, save for emergency car repairs AND pay off student loans at the rate the government wants the loans paid back. That’s why students are defaulting. They cannot afford the payments. It’s not a case of wanting us to pay it for them. They want a good credit report because they want to buy a house. They get the need to pay back loans. They don’t want to live irresponsibly.
So, I think that the solution, what would go a long way, is to make the payments affordable by lowering the interest on the loans. I pay 2% on my car loan and the bank is not hurting. The government needs to lower the payments by lowering the interest and lower it dramatically and then cap it.
I would also add that we need to cap the tuition rates that universities are charging. The cost for students at major universities is immense and these schools get away with it because they get paid by the government.
As it stands, even though you can get income-based payment plans, what others have told me is that the lower payments don’t even pay off the full amount of interest, much less any of the principle. So, while they are making payments, they are in effect, still going further into debt with each payment. The only good thing is that as long as they make the payments, they protect their credit score, but are stuck renting an apartment. That’s not how it should work.
I think that students really need to think realistically about the kind of job they will get out of college and consider not going to the most expensive colleges. You can end up with $100,000 in student loan debt just for a four year degree that is the same degree offered at less expensive colleges.
The student loan crisis needs to be addressed in terms of getting universities to charge less and the government charging less interest. In truth, we need to privatize student loans through the banks and get the government out of the student loan business.