Using data from Equifax credit reports, the Federal Reserve Bank of Fresh York found that people FIFTY and elderly are carrying nearly $135 million in student-loan debt. The 60 or older have student-loan balances of more than $36 million. The total outstanding student-loan equilibrium stands at about $870 billion, surpassing the total balances due on credit cards ($693 billion) and auto loans ($730 billion).
Of the 37 million borrowers who had student loan balances as of the third quarter last year, 14.4 percent, or about 5.4 million borrowers, had at least one past-due student loan account.
“With college enrollments increasing and the costs of attendance rising, this equilibrium is expected to continue its upward trend,” the New York Fed report said. “In sum, student loan debt is not just a concern for the young. Given that student loans are an indispensable tool for educational advancement, this form of debt will remain a critical policy concentrate for generations to come.”
You find, this is the problem I’ve had all along with student loans. The loans have get indispensable. As far back as 2006, Deanne Loonin, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center, predicted that many student-loan borrowers would face a lifetime of debt with quick or no chance of escape.
“For all too many Americans seeking to advance themselves through education, the student loan programs are similar to a bait-and-switch scam,” Loonin wrote in the report “No Way Out: Student Loans, Financial Distress, and The Need for Policy Reform.” “They are lured in at the outset, commonly when they are quite young, by flexible underwriting and eligibility standards and the promise of economic rewards through education. After school ends, this aura of benevolence quickly disappears.”
Just recently, the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys given more evidence in yet another report that student loans are the next “debt bomb” that will result in other economic crisis. The group’s members say they are achieving an influx of group who want to file for bankruptcy to get rid of the loans but can’t.
During a massive overhaul of the bankruptcy laws in 2005, lenders succeeded in devising private student loans as challenging to discharge by bankruptcy as federal student loans, that are backed by the U.S. government. Compared with private loans that often have variable interest rates, federal loans regularly have lower interest rates and offer better repayment terms and alternatives.
Student-loan debt can just be discharged if the debtor can prove that repayment of the loan would outcome in “undue hardship.” But a couple of people have the wealth it expends to pay for specified litigation, the bankruptcy attorneys’ association said.
Legislation was introduced last year in the House and Senate that would permit private student-loan debt to be discharged in bankruptcy. Borrowers would still have to pay off any federal loans, however.
Getting that legislation leaved will be tough and, really, it won’t solve the trouble. Ever since I began this column in 1997, I’ve cautioned against the growing reliance on debt to fund a college education. I never embraced the notion that student loans should be sighted as “good” debt. Hearing this kind of pitch, people didn’t learn the dangers in having debt that should be stretched out for 20 to 40 years.
This is no Chicken little story. The sky is falling for many borrowers who are dragging student-loan debt into their senior many years. We have to act to come up with a unbiased plan to eliminate the overreliance on debt for education because the debris from this debt bomb has already dropped on far too many families.
0 comments:
Post a Comment