9/26/2011 9:11:46 PM
^Yep, I do think it's bullshit that there is no escaping student loans through bankruptcy etc. It someone can walk away from their mortgage, they should be able to do the same with student loans. Fair is fair.
9/26/2011 9:29:12 PM
What do you mean fair is fair? People sign contracts for student loans knowing full well they can't discharge them in bankruptcy and now people are pissed they can't be discharged in bankruptcy?!?!?Why do people keep comparing student loans to mortgages. If I default on my mortgage payments the bank takes my house and recoups almost all its losses. It's comparing apples and oranges.Furthermore, the person making 18K doesn't have student loans. My post was just pointing out that a lot of people live above their means and I'm tired of hearing people bitch about making 2X that and not being able to save a penny. Also, there are plenty of jobs out there, but heaven forbid someone lower themselves to do some $10/hr job or manual labor even though it could actually lead to something fruitful.
9/26/2011 9:57:29 PM
The sad thing is restaurants and bars are always hiring people and in everyone (7 total) you could average at least 30k a year working 40 hours a week on average. Some even offered discounted health insurance. One even had a 50% matching 401k. I would love to not have to pay student loans for the degree I never finished. However it seems irresponsible to just get rid of everyone's debts.
9/26/2011 10:14:01 PM
If I default on my student loan, I can't buy anything ever again. It's not like there is no penalty for non-payment.
9/26/2011 10:15:46 PM
9/26/2011 10:16:03 PM
9/26/2011 10:16:20 PM
9/26/2011 10:34:39 PM
9/26/2011 11:13:12 PM
9/26/2011 11:22:44 PM
Meanwhile... http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/09/the-real-problem-with-college-admissions-its-not-the-rankings/245649/
9/27/2011 12:17:38 AM
People keep bringing up "unemployment" in general when the focus here is on college loans being repaid. Yes the overall unemployment rate is not great, (It really isn't a crisis at this point imo though) but we can't be cherry-picking information here to support the cause. The majority of the unemployed people do not have college loans, thus you can't use the unemployment % as a whole to back up wanting to forgive student loan debt.The last labor report I saw had unemployment among adults with a bachelor's degree or higher at something like 4% which is actually over 1% lower than it was 10 months ago. That number didn't just include recent graduates either (meaning lots of adults far removed from college who don't have student loans are rolled up into the 4%) and it also doesn't factor in the percentage of recent college graduates who don't have any loans (scholarships, parents, or worked a lot during college etc.). Now that we are down to just a couple % of new graduates who are unemployed, how many of them have actually done everything that is reasonable (and yes, having to move to take a job is extremely reasonable) to find a good job? Once you stand back and look at that, I think the story of the unemployed college graduate who really worked his butt off but still can't find any decent job is an outlier case that gets highlighted on CNN for dramatic effect.Yes, the system needs reform probably, and I agree that it sucks if someone is truly a hard worker and simply cannot find a job somehow, especially if they have a lot of college loans. I just don't think that is the case among the majority of the young and unemployed.
9/27/2011 8:07:49 AM
9/27/2011 9:07:45 AM
I would prob go a little higher than the minimum... But only because I know I'll be starting at at least $50K/yearBut that stings a bit[Edited on September 27, 2011 at 9:15 AM. Reason : But I do know my loans aren't all stafford loans - I have the grad plus loan as well]
9/27/2011 9:13:50 AM
9/27/2011 9:22:39 AM
9/27/2011 9:36:25 AM
9/27/2011 9:36:57 AM
I guess they're really bringing up that 4% rate then In reality that does suck and I'm not saying that reimbursing some loans isn't the correct long-term solution. I just think that a lot of research needs to go into something like this first to see if it actually makes sense and how many people it would actually help who are the true target of the idea. (% of people it would actually help who are the "ideal" candidates for something like this). [Edited on September 27, 2011 at 9:59 AM. Reason : ]
9/27/2011 9:45:38 AM
9/27/2011 9:46:26 AM
9/27/2011 9:47:34 AM
9/27/2011 9:56:01 AM
Finally, a reasonable idea. This is the kind of stuff I'd like to see. Cutting the problem off at it's source opposed to the whole "let student loans be discharged in bankruptcy" argument.
9/27/2011 10:00:00 AM
What if they treated school loans like mortgages and took your degree away if you went bankrupt??
9/27/2011 10:00:55 AM
^^^ I would definitely agree with a lot of that[Edited on September 27, 2011 at 10:03 AM. Reason : ]
9/27/2011 10:03:46 AM
Interesting link
9/27/2011 10:28:45 AM
Sounds like Dave is pushing for better secondary education!
9/27/2011 10:42:20 AM
9/27/2011 1:39:20 PM
Why can't I just have free money?
9/27/2011 1:41:33 PM
^^^Haha. Now, now, the Deltas and Epsilons have their place in society.
9/27/2011 1:49:31 PM
9/27/2011 2:00:28 PM
There have been lawyers (I think in Texas and maybe Mass.) who were disbarred for being unable to pay their student loans because they couldn't find work, so this "lose your degree" thing isn't too far off from reality in some cases.
9/27/2011 3:05:11 PM
I think it was in Ohio because he failed the Character and Fitness Mandate.
9/27/2011 3:30:59 PM
9/27/2011 3:50:51 PM
^^http://www.smallfirmsuccess.org/ethics/small-firm-ethics-issues/lawyer-disbarred-for-defaulting-on-student-loansLooks like it was Texas but yeah, it was a character and fitness thing
9/27/2011 3:58:20 PM
http://abovethelaw.com/2011/01/character-fitness-fail-for-graduate-with-no-plan-to-pay-off-his-debts/
9/27/2011 4:12:35 PM
Welp looks like it's happening all over thenGood to know
9/27/2011 4:13:25 PM
9/27/2011 4:40:56 PM
^I'm not naive at all. Everything you said is completely true. That doesn't mean a discussion about alternatives and solutions is stupid or a waste.If you think it is, feel free to just stop reading.
9/27/2011 6:38:28 PM
10/3/2011 5:25:16 PM
Wait, you're supposed to consider the cost-to-benefit ratio of your education? I thought you just went to the most expensive school you could get into, got any degree, and assumed it would all work out.
10/3/2011 5:50:10 PM
as someone who works in the financial aid dept of a college, i find that graph to be so incorrect and outdated on so many levels that i dont know where to even begin dissecting itthe federal default rate on the chart is way off and default in no way helps a school. If any title IV receiving institution has too high of a default rate, they can lose their ability to give title iv to students. It is true you should look to decrease your expenses, maximize your income and minimize the total amount that you borrow, but anyone can slap together a bullshit flow chart to show everything wrong with student loans today.[Edited on October 5, 2011 at 12:59 AM. Reason : ..]
10/5/2011 12:51:38 AM
So what I got from that hippie chart is that they would be happy if you could go to school, rack up hundreds of thousands of dollars in student loan debt, then declare bankruptcy upon graduation. That or allow everyone to default on taking out a loan with no penalty.These people are our future.God damn it.
10/5/2011 7:23:11 AM
More disappointingly, you are our present.
10/5/2011 7:54:05 AM
Yeah, I'm going to have to pay for all of these hippies when they kick back on welfare
10/5/2011 8:20:08 AM
While we're at it, let's get rid of that too.
10/5/2011 11:17:53 AM
BSABootstrap States of America
10/5/2011 11:31:30 AM
10/5/2011 11:50:55 AM
http://www.naceweb.org/research/salary_survey/This is the probably the most common source for 'average salary offer' information for college grads.Almost every university, including State, publishes these numbers on admissions pages as bait. The departmental pages for each major often cite the breakdown for that major.I would call these statistics laughably unbelievable, but they are believed. It takes a cynical college grad in a tough market to look back at them and see the flaw that should have been clear.Nobody should care about the 'average salary offer.' Companies will only report the offers they've made for positions that require a college degree and target new grads, not their average offer to folks who just graduated and applied to be a customer service rep.The relevant statistic would be "median annual pay six months after graduation" for all graduates in that major. And at this point, those numbers might be HALF of what is touted.They say that the average salary offer for a business management grad is $46k. People read that and think they'll be fine, because they are gullible. But there is no way in hell that is anywhere near the expected salary for your standard business major (not hating on them, I was a Finance guy). "Offers" for new college grads in customer service, retail sales, and warehouse work are not included in that $46k number, yet they are probably more representative of the median job after graduation than the things that offer $46k.A dozen ABA-accredited law schools are being sued for using misleading (or outright false) numbers for earnings after graduation, and it's time that the NACE or a bunch of universities got hit on that as well.[Edited on October 8, 2011 at 3:24 AM. Reason : s]
10/8/2011 3:23:08 AM
Can you post the info? I don't have an account.
10/8/2011 11:42:03 AM
I don't have an account or the full report, but some news articles report specific numbers. Here is one: http://www.staffingindustry.com/Research-Publications/Daily-News/Grads-Average-Salary-Offer-Now-51-171The main sentence on the NACE page has all the lies necessary to prove the point:
10/8/2011 1:14:16 PM