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The Basics

Is student debt really a problem?

Typical student debt for a bachelor's degree is just below $20,000, but community college debt sees a big jump. And the recession could be a game-changer.

By U.S. News & World Report

Most college students and recent graduates are not saddled with oppressive education loans, according to a report issued by the College Board in August. But the report also documented a surprising and troubling increase in the debt loads shouldered by students attending the lowest-cost schools of all -- local, public community colleges.

One-third of all new bachelor's degree recipients in June of 2008 started their working lives without a penny in federal or private educational debt. Only 10% of last year's graduates owed more than $40,000, according to the lead author of the report, College Board researcher Patricia Steele. (She did not count credit card debt or other noneducational liabilities such as car loans.)

The median borrower graduated last year owing almost $20,000, a $1,026 increase from the typical debt load of 2004 graduates. "Most people would say that is a reasonable amount of debt to take on for a baccalaureate degree," especially if students stick with federal loans, which now allow borrowers to adjust their payments to their income, Steele says.

The College Board, an organization made up of colleges, published the report to "take down a notch the sensationalist stories about students drowning in debt," Steele says.

Some surprises

But Steele was surprised "by the extremes" she found in recently released federal borrowing statistics. About 5% of students who got associate's degrees from public community colleges in 2008 left school owing more than $30,000. The average tuition at a public community college last year was just $2,402. Add in $1,000 or so a year for books and supplies, and the total education cost for two years shouldn't exceed $7,000.

Steele was also puzzled by the jump in the percentage of public community college finishers who borrowed -- from 30% in 2004 to 38% in 2008.

David Baime, the vice president of government relations for the American Association of Community Colleges, notes that government grants and scholarships didn't keep up with inflation during most of the decade. Community colleges raised their tuition on average by almost $500 between 2003 and 2007. But the federal Pell grant rose by only $260.

"Real family incomes declined over that period. The costs of textbooks were spiking," and loans were very easy to get during the credit bubble, Baime says.

Lauren Asher, the president of the Institute for College Access and Success, points out that living costs such as health care and energy also rose dramatically during that period. In addition, the shortage of grant money has meant that the 80% of needy community college students are left with a gap of $5,277 between what the government estimates they can afford and the bills they have to pay, she says.

"People think of community college as affordable," but students who attend community college full time (and are thus more likely to graduate) "are having a harder time covering their living costs without borrowing," Asher says.

Debt not necessarily unwise

Asher, Steele and other analysts agree, however, that a reasonable amount of low-interest education debt shouldn't alarm students or parents. "It's not that all borrowing is bad," Asher says. "If you are close to finishing and you need to borrow so that you can get a degree, you may be making a very wise decision," she says, adding: "If you drop out of school, you will be left worse off."

Video: Guess who ties for top college?

The recessionary spike in unemployment, which is driving thousands of newly needy students to college, will probably lead to a rise in the number of students who borrow. And recent increases in tuition and the maximum allowable federal student loans are likely to increase the amount students will borrow, analysts say. But analysts also note that the credit crunch wiped out financial companies that used to advertise easy $40,000 private education loans on television. So the number of students taking out big, expensive private loans could plunge.

This article was reported by Kim Clark for U.S. News & World Report.

Published Sept. 3, 2009

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Wednesday, September 02, 2009 8:12:19 PM
yes, hard to say...
Wednesday, September 02, 2009 8:24:17 PM

The Student Loan Industry is a major racket. Students are convinced by Collegiate Finance Officers (whose true and undisclosed interest is in getting the school paid) that wonderful well-paying jobs await the graduate which will easily cover their student loan repayment costs. FRAUD!!!

I had paid off one set of student loans but thought that I needed to go back to obtain a professional degree. I was convinced that the jobs were readily available and that my school would help me obtain one. FRAUD!!!

Needless to say, over the past decade, in spite of literally thousands of applications and resumes, I am still stuck in a low-paying part-time non-benefitted position which does not cover the basic needs of my family.

Needless to say, words like loan forgiveness and forbearance are meaningless to the thugs that run this racket. In spite of my multiple requests to the contrary, they have placed my account in default and added a bundle in charges for the privilege. Moreover, they are garnishing my meager earnings to boot!

These people are allowed to run roughshod over us because our elected representatives have been bought by the industry and violated the Bill of Rights (Equal Protection) by preventing us from having any legal rights in these matters, including the right to discharge our school loan debts in bankruptcy.

The jobs and salaries that many of us were promised do not, and did not at the time that they were promised, exist. The schools did not help us get the jobs because they did not exist. The industry knew, or should have known, at the time that we became obligated, that these jobs did not exist. Nevertheless, they obligated us anyway. They were required to make full disclosure -- they failed to do so. FRAUD!!!

I have not paid off my loans not because I didn't want to pay them off. They have not been paid off because I cannot physically pay them off. Yet, I am treated like a criminal, in spite of my efforts, and cannot even get copies of my transcripts from my institution!!!

Our full civil rights must be restored IMMEDIATELY!!! Why are we required to live as second class citizens? Because DOE and the industry want slaves? Where is fairness?

RESTORE OUR FULL CIVIL RIGHTS NOW!!!

Wednesday, September 02, 2009 10:20:43 PM

While I don't like to feed the trolls, I must respond to this comment.  Some questions:

 

1) Who signed on the dotted line to obtain these loans?

2) Who read/didn't read the fine print to ensure they knew what they were getting themselves into?

3) Who made the decision to enter into college and borrow?

 

I believe we all know the answer.  I've said this many times, but it is you who signed the line, you who didn't do the research and you who put yourself into this situation.

 

These days are a two way road.  Since we all have the right to decide what we want to do (capitalism) and where we'd like to be, we also reap the consequences and rewards of our own actions.

 

However, we don't have 'slavery' and our 'civil rights' taken away from us from our own free will.  It is by our choice that we do this. 

 

You can blame whoever you want for your troubles.  However, it is still your choice on how you are going to take the 'hits' that come in life.

 

In our capitalist society (hate it if you wish), you are paid based on 'your' merits.  If you decide to make something of yourself, great.  If you decide to shirk because you feel life is unfair, that is your choice.  I believe it is up to you to choose what your attitude will be.

 

I've taken out student loans.  However, I've been fortunate in the fact that I studied in a field that had prospects and I was very conservative in my borrowing.  I'm doing all I can to pay back the loans i PROMISED to pay when I signed on the dotted line.

 

Hate the system all you want.  You would not have received those monies if the guarantees weren't in place.  College students tend not to have long periods of credit worthiness to begin with.  Thus, additional stipulations need to be put into place to ensure the lenders will give them the money.

 

If your really want freedom, why don't you head over to Europe where a University education is free.  Then, as you write down the top 10 jobs you'd like to have, you get stuck with one that is undesireable.  Otherwise, make something of yourself, change your attitude and succeed.

 

To those who have borrowed to get through college, do your best, get great grades and enjoy the experience.  It only happens once.  I enjoyed my college experience and am grateful I had the opportunity to obtain a degree.  We may be in difficult times right now, but they will get better.  Life will go on and you will be rewarded for your efforts if you chose to make it count.

Thursday, September 03, 2009 5:23:44 AM

zink34muraon...You want a change? How about this....

If the American people really want a change. ALL 435 representatives of the people of the USA, come up for reelection in 2010, and 1/3 of the 100 Senate representatives of the people or about 33 (plus those who chose to retire) come up for reelection or a total of about 468 can be replaced by people who listen to us in Nov.2010.  Let's get all the deaf eared egotists, and self-employed career politicians out there and replace them with at least an opposition party or another person of the same party!   

Thursday, September 03, 2009 5:41:24 AM

Somebody's probably already studied it (perhaps Charles Murray of "The Bell Curve" fame), but I'd like to see the benefits of higher education with the effects of intelligence (IQ) removed.  My guess is that they're minimal.

 

I would also guess that not only is jonnyboy3 far more intelligent than zink34muraon, but that he also has twice the character.

 

Zink34muraon:  There are, and always will be, jobs for smart, talented, hard-working people with good attitudes, who want to do the work that is valued by society.  If you're a smart guy with current technical skills, the world will beat a path to your door.

 

Thursday, September 03, 2009 6:34:24 AM
Sounds to me like "The College Board" hired Booz, Allen, Hamilton to prepare for the upcoming congressional debate on student loan debt. Some of these posts smell like teen spirit. Gooooo Cheerleaders! The new...kinder, gentler freedom of choice, is between homelessness and obedience. Connect the dots!
Thursday, September 03, 2009 6:57:49 AM
Amen jonnyboy3!!!!!!!  People need to start taking responsibility for their own actions.  America has become a country of "it's not my fault". I took out college loans and paid them off.  I have always made it a point to pay all borrowed monies off early.  Borrowed money of any type is great but it is a double edge sword and can cause more harm than good.
Thursday, September 03, 2009 7:16:39 AM

Sometimes, it is not what you owe when you graduate but interests accumulation till you find a suitable job that pays enough to pay your student loan payments and have an austere decent lifestyle. Moreover, if you get to that point of being able to pay and in today's job market, you can lose your job very easily. So, I have a friend who owed $41,000 dollars at her graduation and now owes close to $110,000. From the beginning to the end, she has felt in a hole. Her debt is not a million bucks but the joke comes when she attends some interviews and she hears comments about how worthless is a college degree or when she can not access a professional job because she doesnt have experience. The catch-22 trap of experience. She was never able to make enough and her debt kept growing and growing. Student loans are a huge business. If you add other factors or circumstances like dysfunctional families, no money to buy a car, etc, the problem is affecting her entire life. Then, of course, she has to go back to school to get some sort of certification, etc. More loans.

Well, when I go to her room, I find her with a million books. I mean this generation is not stupid. US government shouldnt let companies outsource or move overseas if possible. We are wasting american talent. Many companies want a million excuses to pay less and less. They know students are very prepared. They dont need that much knowledge to survive in this world. On the other hand, if they owe that much money when they are just barely taking off, they cannot afford to, at least, open their own businesses. Of course, she had classmates with better luck than hers but for every success, there are a million failures. Something in our society or in our system is not working right. Try adding health insurance costs to your student loans and you are done!

Thursday, September 03, 2009 7:35:12 AM
All you surly, old conservatives preaching "you signed the dotted line," consider this: College costs were reasonable when you went.  That is no longer the case.  Do a little research and you will clearly see annual increases FAR above market trends.  So what are we to do? Decide not to go to school and succomb to becoming a poor, sad poopsmith or go to school get a decent paying job and still have to live like a poor, sad poopsmith because our student loan debt is so outrageous? I'm fully aware that I signed for my loans (I was there), they're mine and I will pay them off (eventually) - I'm not looking for a hand out here, you've missed the point.  I'm looking for someone to step up and realize that this is becoming a bigger problem year after year and something needs to be done to help control the costs for the youngins of the future.  Lastly, I apologize for the "surly, old, conservatives" comment - that was ill-placed, ill-humored, and just flat ill (although I'm sure no offense was taken as we all know how proud of being surly,old conservatives surly, old, conservatives really are - And that's ok, we young, hipster, liberals are proud of caring about more than just ourselves. GO AMERICA!). 
#10
Thursday, September 03, 2009 7:46:40 AM
I think the problem with student loans is not so much that students need to take them in order to go to college, but the high interest rates paid on the loans afterward.  Currently student loan interest rates are almost 7%. 
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