But as the economy continues to stagnate, the number of internships, co-ops, and research opportunities decrease, making it more difficult to find those chances in undergrad. I feel very fortunate I was in school while the economy was good and it was easy to get internships. Now I work for a university and daily see undergrad students fretting because even bullshit work study jobs have dried up as departments tighten their belts.
9/18/2011 9:37:17 AM
Is there a petition for people who do not support this?
9/18/2011 6:31:47 PM
Yeah, this thing sounds all kinds of stupid. And wtf was up with someone actually bitching about the cost of NCSU tuition on the last page? It's a joke compared with many other schools.[Edited on September 18, 2011 at 6:49 PM. Reason : ]
9/18/2011 6:49:11 PM
This is a staggeringly stupid idea. It's awful that it's even being proposed and discussed.
9/18/2011 6:59:16 PM
This is a silly idea.With that said, it's also silly that you can't refinance your government student loan.
9/18/2011 7:02:15 PM
That is also true.
9/18/2011 7:03:25 PM
My girlfriend is paying nearly 7% on her med school loan, double what it would be today, but can't refinance. Then there are matters like this: there's federal debt forgiveness for medical workers in the public sector, but since there are no public hospitals in the area, she doesn't qualify, even though private hospitals like WakeMed function as public hospitals by not turning away patients.
9/18/2011 7:10:54 PM
Beggers can't be choosers.I mean, I hear what you're saying...the distinction between public and private seems dumb to me, although I'm not an expert on this program. Of course, we probably shouldn't be forgiving the debt for any of them.[Edited on September 18, 2011 at 7:18 PM. Reason : ]
9/18/2011 7:17:25 PM
I just don't understand this concept of people agreeing to take out a loan at a certain % and then being pissed off when they are forced to make payments.
9/18/2011 7:55:37 PM
^ Not complaining about having to pay, but it is a bit ridiculous that you can refinance any other loan in the world, but not a government student loan.^^ The idea is that the government will forgive a certain part of debt if you use your education to work for the public good (same idea as the Teaching Fellows tuition subsidy if you agree to teach at a public school). You shouldn't have to move out of Wake County to serve the public good just because the county hospital is now a private corporation.
9/18/2011 8:22:15 PM
Does it count if she works at Rex? Or commutes to Chapel Hill?WakeMed isn't the only hospital in the area, right?(She should work at the central prison hospital and really do her part!!! LOL)
9/18/2011 9:18:14 PM
9/18/2011 9:29:43 PM
I don't quite understand the irrational loyalty to creditors over borrowers in this thread. The problem, essentially the same as the one in the housing bubble, is that banks have been giving out loans on items that were highly overvalued due to market intervention. In the housing bubble, home prices came down to earth, but banks were (are) still using "mark to myth" - assessing the value of the loan based on the nominal value of the item at the time of its purchase. The same thing is going on with student loans - the cost of a degree is typically significantly more than its real value.Without the government props, this bubble never could have become as outrageous as it has become. As a matter of fact, though, there are people now that will never be able to pay off their loans, barring some massive, unexpected windfall. Sorry, guys...we're not going to move into the "new sustainable economy" with a generation of debt slaves. The bad debt needs to be cleared out, and we need to end this system that perpetually sends good money after bad.[Edited on September 18, 2011 at 9:39 PM. Reason : ]
9/18/2011 9:37:27 PM
9/18/2011 10:06:52 PM
you signed a contract to borrow that money and pay it back. Ante up, motherfucker.
9/18/2011 10:07:39 PM
http://signon.org/sign/want-a-real-economic?source=mo&id=31019-9543047-IY_VKMx>_<
9/18/2011 10:13:57 PM
There's no reason you can't change the contract law, though. Maybe this isn't the solution, but I agree with the gist of what d357r0y3r is saying. This bill isn't meant to be a handout just for the hell of it - it's to get people to spend money and create jobs. The underlying big picture problems are what need to be fixed first.
9/18/2011 10:27:11 PM
If A and B enter into a contract, and then mutually agree to amend that contract, then good for them.If C and A get together and say to B, "Fuck you and your contract", that's a different matter.
9/18/2011 10:39:09 PM
Yeah, and the government gives out most student loans now, so no problem there. Does anyone not go through FAFSA?
9/18/2011 10:50:20 PM
I guess we live in a representative democracy, so everyone technically has a say-so, but effectively, you have the government brokering a loan between A and [everyone], and then telling A that they can walk with [everyone]'s money.
9/19/2011 12:37:35 AM
9/19/2011 10:01:44 AM
I'm a little torn here. I understand the argument some people have on the other side and do agree there are some mismanaged aspects of the whole student loan deal. I do also know non-lazy, smart people who got degrees in useful studies and have just not been at the right place at the right time to get the job that makes their investment in their degree worth it. Hasn't really been there fault that they aren't able to pay much of the debt down. (They are all working and paying the debt, just not making what they expected).At the same time I have busted my butt to make my investment in myself worth it and pay back the student loans. I took out loans for my entire college education at State because my parents had no money saved up for it. I graduated in 2007 and my loans should be paid off within the next 12 months.
9/19/2011 10:13:06 AM
9/19/2011 10:36:42 AM
^^dur. their* not there. I'm ashamed.[Edited on September 19, 2011 at 11:25 AM. Reason : ]
9/19/2011 11:24:55 AM
9/19/2011 11:54:19 AM
Even at six figures, that debt can reasonably be expected to be paid off
9/19/2011 12:02:47 PM
Let's use the example I used earlier in the thread: someone that has 100k-300k of debt from getting a J.D. from a 3rd/4th tier law school. Those people aren't going to find a high-income job.Combine that with the fact that the economy has been losing steam for some time, and that there's a good chance we'll see negative GDP growth in the coming years...it's not a rosy picture. Interest rates are eventually going to have to go up even higher, and when that happens, a lot of this debt will be regarded as toxic.[Edited on September 19, 2011 at 12:16 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2011 12:13:41 PM
It's certainly not fair to discharge at least some student loan debts. Just like it wasn't fair to bail out the banks. But having a generation of debt slaves and a huge amount of toxic assets is going to drag the economy down, just like not bailing out the banks would have been more fair but worse for the economy.
9/19/2011 12:34:31 PM
Noen is an idiot.
9/19/2011 12:47:10 PM
^^ that's the stuff that has me not knowing how I really feel about this. Fair vs what is good for the overall economy. With the economy being so poor since I have been out of school, I have spent a lot of money paying down my student loans as opposed to putting extra into house payments or extra investing which might not guarantee a better return. After paying tens of thousands of dollars in student loan repayment over the past 4.5 years and being ~1 year from finishing, it would be a punch in the gut to finish my loans and have a bunch of other people get their loans forgiven.Especially if you think about it on a same major vs same major level. I busted my butt, did the mature thing and took a job that moved me away from friends and family and my gf at the time (now wife) because it was the right career/financial move, and have paid ahead to finish my loans early. No matter how many filters they put in to stream stuff, part of me will always know that I did all that and turned around and then paid someone else tens of thousands of dollars of my own money for them to get an ME degree and not get a job because they weren't flexible in moving or didn't bust their butt in school. Yes there will always be people who are legitimately getting screwed by this economy but the scenario I described will almost certainly happen and, in a completely selfish way, that irks me.
9/19/2011 1:08:31 PM
9/19/2011 1:38:28 PM
Right...but we don't say that you have to keep the debt from a car no matter what. At some point, it's determined that you can't even service the interest on the loan, so you default. That's why large student loans are a bad idea.
9/19/2011 1:50:26 PM
correct, they take your car back. Unless your proposing we lobotomize people to take back the education they got then making it non-default-able is about the only way to handle this.
9/19/2011 2:03:23 PM
http://www.google.com/search?q=hr+365+debt
9/19/2011 2:16:41 PM
Nah, there are a lot of ways to handle it. Borrowers with unserviceable debt have their credit taken out back and shot, principle/interest reduced to amount deemed payable by the courts. Creditors suffer major losses for being idiots. Government stops propping up the system. It's unsustainable - let's get back to a model that will allow us to compete in the global market. Let's not stick with a model that is clearly not working and putting us further and further behind out of "fairness" to the banks. The banks get to loan out money they don't even have due to the fractional reserve system...they are not on your team.
9/19/2011 2:19:10 PM
9/19/2011 3:06:05 PM
d357r0y3r is on point here.
9/19/2011 7:30:17 PM
^^ Yeah I wouldn't mind if we did something similar to Sweden. Hell most of the Indian and Korean students I work for have all their US education paid for by their governments.
9/19/2011 9:03:33 PM
9/19/2011 11:01:46 PM
^ I see what you're trying to say, but you can't ignore the fact that filing for bankruptcy is not an easy thing to recover from at all (dur)
9/19/2011 11:12:02 PM
I'd like to see this go through if we could make it into a reality game show. Anyone who has student loan debt can try-out for the show. Cameras follow you around and make sure you're not a lazy schmuck. Each week there would be contests, eliminations, and opportunities for bonuses. Then in the end, the viewers get to vote for who they deem worthy. That person gets all their student loan debts erased and has to write a thank-you note to each person who voted. Might as well try to teach some manners too...
9/19/2011 11:53:57 PM
9/20/2011 12:25:13 AM
If you save the average American you save the country broToo bad we aren't going to have a middle class in 20 years
9/20/2011 12:38:43 AM
Robin hood is a fucked up children's story. Rob from the rich to give to the poor... Moral of the story, stealing is okay,
9/20/2011 12:50:22 AM
Alright well if you're citing Robin Hood as an argument against... progressive taxation? I don't even know what to say. Hope you're on top of the pile when America becomes the Randian Libertopia you people dream of (protip: you won't be)
9/20/2011 1:06:46 AM
Hiro: Yes, actually NCSU is incredibly cheap both in state and out of state. Even when I was in school, NCSU was for instance 1/3 the price of U. Michigan, U. Washington, or CalTech. It was about 1/10th the price of Stanford, MIT, Harvard ,Yale or Princeton. When I went back for graduate school, I chose NCSU in no small part because of how affordable it was. I would have spent at least another 100,000 dollars to go to Stanford for the same graduate program.Geppetto: I'm an idiot? Let me lay the smackdown for you.
9/20/2011 1:20:46 AM
Let me clarify by my definition of "cheap." $30k is a LOT of money, regardless of the comparison. Our society demands the minimum of an undergrad degree in the majority of the sectors of employment and $30k is crazy. A friend of mine graduated and he totalled his expenses including books, meal plan, and on campus dorm expenses at roughly $8k when he graduated in 1992. Here's a list of tuition rates over the years...http://www2.acs.ncsu.edu/upa/otherdata/general/tuitionhist.htmlThe increases are rediculous (way above infaltion rates). Yes, NCSU tuition is more affordable than many other places, but that is not to be confused with that fact that $30k for a 4 year education is "cheap." The education bubble has gotten out of hand and needs to end and if the government stopped giving loan handouts to students, this would help. Demand for college education is high because anyone can "afford" it. Demand goes up, prices for tuition go up everywhere. This doesn't slow demand down though because students continue with their loans, which fuels the tuition increases at colleges and universities even more.The status quo is that you need an education to get a good paying job. Not necessarily so, but young adults sign up with these loans thinking that this is "normal" and what is necessary to be successful. This hurts the government and the students. Meanwhile, those at the University profit.^I totally agree with neon here. I'm impressed man. That's what responsibility is about right there. It appears I'm following the same path through life, with a few twist It IS hard to work and I can totally vouch for that. Progressive taxation is not fair. That's another topic for discussion, not really relevant at the moment to the OP. Oh, and if you don't dream, it can never be. That's what goals are all about.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 2:49 AM. Reason : .][Edited on September 20, 2011 at 2:49 AM. Reason : .]
9/20/2011 2:39:26 AM
Damn, tuition has more than doubled since my freshman year (01-02)Pretty sad[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 7:38 AM. Reason : lol @ noen's resume. What a fucking chump this guy is.]
9/20/2011 7:37:09 AM
lol @ folks using the term "fair"it's a completely subjective term and it weakens one's argument to use it"it's only fair for people to pay back the money they borrowed" and "it's only fair for people who borrow money to get free hookers and blow every friday night" are both equally correct[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 8:16 AM. Reason : .]
9/20/2011 8:14:44 AM
9/20/2011 8:25:36 AM