Student Loan Interest Rates to Increase - ABC News
The beginning of the month of July will see a hike in interest on federal student loans for Stafford undergraduate, graduate, and parent plus loans.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Friday, June 20, 2014
The Future of Higher Education at Stake
Mark Cuban Student Loan Bubble - Business Insider
Owner of the Dallas Mavericks, shark, and all around business man Mark Cuban warns that the student loan debt bubble could pop, leaving college tuition, and therefore colleges, vulnerable to the same pricing collapse that plagued the housing market during the subprime mortgage crisis of '08.
Owner of the Dallas Mavericks, shark, and all around business man Mark Cuban warns that the student loan debt bubble could pop, leaving college tuition, and therefore colleges, vulnerable to the same pricing collapse that plagued the housing market during the subprime mortgage crisis of '08.
Saturday, June 7, 2014
DO SOMETHING: Ignored Debt Is Really Bad Debt
Don't ignore your debt, especially student loan debt. It's a very toxic and lasting debt to have being that it can't be easily discharged in bankruptcy. It's really bad:
Find out from this abc business article:
What Happens If I Ignore My Student Loans? - ABC News
"Ignoring your debt only makes it worse,” may sound cliche, but when it comes to these loans in particular, there is truth in that adage. Student loans don’t just go away, and the consequences of making no attempt to pay or resolve them can be severe. But what does happen if you ignore your student loans?
- Adam Levin, credit.com
Find out from this abc business article:
What Happens If I Ignore My Student Loans? - ABC News
Friday, September 6, 2013
Student Debt Not A Bubble But Still A Problem
Jordan Weissman from the Atlantic on the J P Morgan's exit from the student loan game and why it doesn't signify a debt crisis of the scale and magnitude of the U.S.'s bygone subprime bubble era:
"But there's also a greater point here. For the most part, it's not helpful to think of student lending, circa 2013, in terms of bubbles at all. Rather, as Chadwick Matlin has put it at Reuters, it's more of an anvil weighing on a large but discrete group of very unfortunate borrowers. In all but the most rare circumstances, it's impossible for former students to discharge their bad debts in bankruptcy. That means the government is mostly protected from defaults. So are the banks, to a degree.Young adults, however, are on the hook for debts they can't handle, but which they'll likely continue to take on so long as college costs stay high. There won't be a moment where the market goes "pop." But there's still a crisis that needs to be addressed.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
For Many Students, College Means Back to Middle School - Kenneth Terrell - The Atlantic
This is a pretty huge problem.
The whole point of primary education is to get your ready for secondary, and secondary is to get you ready for the real world. If there are incongruities on both those levels then what the heck are we doing education-wise? Teach children to learn?
We need to get this education reform thing in full tilt before things get much worse.
This is a pretty huge problem.
The whole point of primary education is to get your ready for secondary, and secondary is to get you ready for the real world. If there are incongruities on both those levels then what the heck are we doing education-wise? Teach children to learn?
We need to get this education reform thing in full tilt before things get much worse.
Labels:
education,
higher education,
news,
the atlantic,
work ready
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Student Loan Repayment Tips for College Dropouts - US News and World Report
Three tips to help with loan repayment for College Dropouts. Including:
1. Pay Soon
2. Be Knowledgeable
3. Part-time May Be Best
Three tips to help with loan repayment for College Dropouts. Including:
1. Pay Soon
2. Be Knowledgeable
3. Part-time May Be Best
Labels:
college,
college dropouts,
repayment,
student debt,
student loans
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Get Your Degrees Kids
Are college degrees still worth it in this economy?
I've seen a lot of articles talking about the value of a college degree in this economic climate. All of them seem to point to very important, the most important. Adults tell you, "Without a college degree, you can't get anywhere in life." Evidently, they are right. Go to school and get a valuable (read: STEM) degree and your future will thank you.
I've seen a lot of articles talking about the value of a college degree in this economic climate. All of them seem to point to very important, the most important. Adults tell you, "Without a college degree, you can't get anywhere in life." Evidently, they are right. Go to school and get a valuable (read: STEM) degree and your future will thank you.
Labels:
are college degrees still worth it in this economy,
degree,
education,
higher education,
jobs,
USA Today
Monday, December 24, 2012
Links: Student Loans, What To Do?
How to Fix the Broken Student Loan System - ABC News
This!
(Seriously though. This an interesting look at the student loan climate and solid ideas on how to fix it.)
SoFi Will Crowdsource Your Student Loans | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation
This?
Stop Handing Out Student Loans Like Candy, Or Else You’ll Get Sued Like Sallie Mae « Above the Law: A Legal Web Site – News, Commentary, and Opinions on Law Firms, Lawyers, Law School, Law Suits, Judges and Courts
More loans=higher tuition costs=more loans=higher tuition costs= more... Anyone else sees a catch-22 here?
Communities of color lose more wealth, carry higher student loan debt | North Dallas Gazette
Like so many other things it seems the loan problem may have a racial overlay.
This!
(Seriously though. This an interesting look at the student loan climate and solid ideas on how to fix it.)
SoFi Will Crowdsource Your Student Loans | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation
This?
Stop Handing Out Student Loans Like Candy, Or Else You’ll Get Sued Like Sallie Mae « Above the Law: A Legal Web Site – News, Commentary, and Opinions on Law Firms, Lawyers, Law School, Law Suits, Judges and Courts
More loans=higher tuition costs=more loans=higher tuition costs= more... Anyone else sees a catch-22 here?
Communities of color lose more wealth, carry higher student loan debt | North Dallas Gazette
Like so many other things it seems the loan problem may have a racial overlay.
Labels:
college,
costs,
debt,
debt bomb,
debt relief,
economy,
education,
higher education,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Democratic Senator Compares Private Student Loans To Dickens-Era Of Debt Prisons
Democratic Senator Compares Private Student Loans To Dickens-Era Of Debt Prisons: pThe inability of Americans to discharge student loan debt in bankruptcy proceedings creates a system of indebtedness like the one that existed during the era of Charles Dickens, when people who couldn’t afford to pay their debts were routinely tossed into prisons, a top Democratic senator declared this week. Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin (D) has [...]/p
Friday, December 14, 2012
Bucks readers weigh in on whether forgiven student loan debt should come with a fat tax bill from the Internal Revenue Service.
(Above from the NYTiimes blog.)
Labels:
debt,
debt bomb,
debt relief,
economy,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans,
taxes
Friday, December 7, 2012
Bankruptcy on Student Loans
Encourage bankruptcy, not forgiveness, for student loans (essay) | Inside Higher Ed
I'm not sure which sounds better, but Inside Higher Ed does make a very pointed case for reactivating the ability to discharge student loans in bankruptcy over either student loan forgiveness or the current situation.
I'm not sure which sounds better, but Inside Higher Ed does make a very pointed case for reactivating the ability to discharge student loans in bankruptcy over either student loan forgiveness or the current situation.
Labels:
bankruptcy,
college,
economy,
education,
higher education,
loans,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans
Highlander – Dead and still buried in college debt: let’s forgive student loans
This article makes a interesting and sensible point regarding how we should deal with student loans when they don't provide a return on what we invest, as in when a loan holder passes and the loan holder's parent are stuck with the bill. It's interesting to think of a school loan in a more concrete way. That's one difference between education loans and housing loans; you can't repossess someone's education as you would their house, or car. Education is an abstract object, but what if, especially in circumstance of death we are able to "return" what we invested in considering if we do continue to pay we are paying for something that's going unused. This isn't a broken toy here, you break it you bought it shouldn't apply.
This article makes a interesting and sensible point regarding how we should deal with student loans when they don't provide a return on what we invest, as in when a loan holder passes and the loan holder's parent are stuck with the bill. It's interesting to think of a school loan in a more concrete way. That's one difference between education loans and housing loans; you can't repossess someone's education as you would their house, or car. Education is an abstract object, but what if, especially in circumstance of death we are able to "return" what we invested in considering if we do continue to pay we are paying for something that's going unused. This isn't a broken toy here, you break it you bought it shouldn't apply.
Labels:
debt,
debt relief,
education,
higher education,
loans,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans
Friday, November 30, 2012
Note To Self: No National Economic Problem Doesn't Mean There's No Problem
Why not to fear a student-loan bubble - The Tell - MarketWatch
I've seen it argued a few times that there's nothing to worry about as far as U.S. debt bubbles go because there's not really one. I don't know if that's true or not, but whether it's either or, student borrowers should still take time to get acquainted with the loaning system. We should know how much money we need to pay for school and if the pay off after is worth the debt we accumulate during. Also we need to know whether we believe we'll have the ability to pay off the debt in the long-run. Paul Dales, the guy quoted in the piece linked above says that now this deptbubble (blip?), "just needs to be monitored," so we probably won't see any huge changes in the system anytime soon if others find this student loan thing to be more of a blip than a bomb.
I've seen it argued a few times that there's nothing to worry about as far as U.S. debt bubbles go because there's not really one. I don't know if that's true or not, but whether it's either or, student borrowers should still take time to get acquainted with the loaning system. We should know how much money we need to pay for school and if the pay off after is worth the debt we accumulate during. Also we need to know whether we believe we'll have the ability to pay off the debt in the long-run. Paul Dales, the guy quoted in the piece linked above says that now this dept
Labels:
economy,
education,
higher education,
Market Watch,
Paul Dales,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans
Monday, November 12, 2012
For example, debt relief is like taking gummi bears to treat Ebola. Without institutional change, debt will reload within a decade.
Umair Haque , tweet (@umairh)
Labels:
debt,
debt bomb,
debt relief,
economy,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans,
tweet,
Twitter,
Umair Haque
Saturday, November 3, 2012
A Few More Important Articles Regarding Student Loans...
Election will affect student loans, Pell Grants - News - Daily Campus - Southern Methodist University
When heading to the polls, which candidate is right for economy? What about education? Because, you know, those two things are highly related. What will President Obama do if he's reelected in the current election? Governor Mitt Romney? Is either plan right for you?
Speaking of...
Which Candidate Has Good Student Loan Plan? Neither - US Business News - CNBC
It turns out no matter which of the two candidates you pick, you've picked the wrong one on education...
Complaints may presage student loan crisis - The Washington Post
When are we going to take the "debt bomb" seriously? Maybe we can preempt the looming catastrophe and prevent four or more years of slog the way we didn't with the mortgages. Or maybe it's all just a bunch of hoopla...
Don't buy myth of student loan 'crisis' | The Columbia Daily Tribune - Columbia, Missouri
See? Hoopla.
Lastly,
Don't take on new loan debt | Recordnet.com
Because Michelle Singletary is doing an excellent job over at the Washington Post writing about student loans. Plus the advice of the above article, though aimed at recent graduates, is a universal one: Look before you leap (or better yet, considering the clear evidence of the currenct educational/economic problem, it's probably better to just not leap while you look).
When heading to the polls, which candidate is right for economy? What about education? Because, you know, those two things are highly related. What will President Obama do if he's reelected in the current election? Governor Mitt Romney? Is either plan right for you?
Speaking of...
Which Candidate Has Good Student Loan Plan? Neither - US Business News - CNBC
It turns out no matter which of the two candidates you pick, you've picked the wrong one on education...
Complaints may presage student loan crisis - The Washington Post
When are we going to take the "debt bomb" seriously? Maybe we can preempt the looming catastrophe and prevent four or more years of slog the way we didn't with the mortgages. Or maybe it's all just a bunch of hoopla...
Don't buy myth of student loan 'crisis' | The Columbia Daily Tribune - Columbia, Missouri
See? Hoopla.
Lastly,
Don't take on new loan debt | Recordnet.com
Because Michelle Singletary is doing an excellent job over at the Washington Post writing about student loans. Plus the advice of the above article, though aimed at recent graduates, is a universal one: Look before you leap (or better yet, considering the clear evidence of the currenct educational/economic problem, it's probably better to just not leap while you look).
Labels:
candidates,
college,
costs,
debt bomb,
education,
government,
higher education,
Obama,
Romney,
student loans,
tuition
Nick Gidwani: Obama and Student Loans: Income-Based Repayment
In 2010 we started an overhaul on healthcare with Obamacare. I think it's time to do something similar with our education system. The Huffington Post article by Nick Gidwani, linked above, starts the conversation off and points us in a direction. In it he describes our current detrimental situation and steps that have been taken by the president to rectify the situation.
The steps basically is a tighter form of student loan forgiveness--a cause I believe in for obvious personal reason, but one that I realize is rife with problems; the largest being where would we get the money to do that and what lesson do we learn by doing it. The latter of the two problems is what Gidwani caps his article off with and he's right.
Student loan forgiveness, or leniency as the College Cost Reduction and Access Act referenced in the article would closer resemble, would only relieve the immediate problem and only a narrow slice of it at that. The immediate problem is that college cost is getting high, and that's not including the fact that it has become harder to pay for college due to stagnant pay and rising cost of living. The article suggests that making it somewhat easier to pay loans back and cancel them decades down the line causes them to also look more attractive to potential students. This is bad because isn't out problem that too many college students and graduates are saddled with debt that they are struggling to repay. Not only that I've seen several articles connecting rising college tuition with the increase of loan acquistion. Again Gidwani is right. This is "a conversation n we need to have."
In 2010 we started an overhaul on healthcare with Obamacare. I think it's time to do something similar with our education system. The Huffington Post article by Nick Gidwani, linked above, starts the conversation off and points us in a direction. In it he describes our current detrimental situation and steps that have been taken by the president to rectify the situation.
The steps basically is a tighter form of student loan forgiveness--a cause I believe in for obvious personal reason, but one that I realize is rife with problems; the largest being where would we get the money to do that and what lesson do we learn by doing it. The latter of the two problems is what Gidwani caps his article off with and he's right.
Student loan forgiveness, or leniency as the College Cost Reduction and Access Act referenced in the article would closer resemble, would only relieve the immediate problem and only a narrow slice of it at that. The immediate problem is that college cost is getting high, and that's not including the fact that it has become harder to pay for college due to stagnant pay and rising cost of living. The article suggests that making it somewhat easier to pay loans back and cancel them decades down the line causes them to also look more attractive to potential students. This is bad because isn't out problem that too many college students and graduates are saddled with debt that they are struggling to repay. Not only that I've seen several articles connecting rising college tuition with the increase of loan acquistion. Again Gidwani is right. This is "a conversation n we need to have."
Labels:
college,
government,
Student Loan Forgiveness,
student loans
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Note To Self: No Loans Unless You Have Money To Pay Back, Quickly
Sallie Mae Assists 2.2 Million Student Loan Customers to Avoid Default - DailyFinance
Sallie Mae Tops Student Loan Complaints - Business Insider
I have problem with Sallie Mae too, but I know in my case it's not at all their fault, and in a general sense I don't believe it's entirely their fault. Fact of the matter is personally I should have never done business with Sallie Mae. I knew nothing about loans and took the advice of people that didn't realize I knew nothing about loans. It was kind of a Catch-22 situation. If I knew more about loans I probably would have been able to asked the right question, but not need to. Since I didn't know anything about loans I didn't know the right questions to ask when I really needed to.
I believe loan company try to help and more specifically their employees. I talked to the really nice guy named R__ recently. He did his best to help, it's just that the means the company provides to help is kind of like a Catch-22 situation. If I were able to pay you $3000 to bring my payment up-to-date you would so not be calling me right now because surely I would have been making the, what, $50 or $100 payments all along. But sometimes policy trumps people. That's not the company's fault, completely. They service upwards of 2.2 million people (I'm using the figure in the article cause I don't have the actual one right now in front of me.), so they have to protect their interests to keep operating and providing loans to the needy.
That's tough.
I just wish there was an easier way to individualize the process. Really give people who can't options and ways to payback the loan. I'm sure not everyone who borrows money is looking for a way not to pay you back. If they had the cash flow, the payment surely would be flowing the way of the lenders. At least that's the way I feel about my personal situation compared to how I must look to the Sallie Mae, (etc.), computers.
Sallie Mae Tops Student Loan Complaints - Business Insider
I have problem with Sallie Mae too, but I know in my case it's not at all their fault, and in a general sense I don't believe it's entirely their fault. Fact of the matter is personally I should have never done business with Sallie Mae. I knew nothing about loans and took the advice of people that didn't realize I knew nothing about loans. It was kind of a Catch-22 situation. If I knew more about loans I probably would have been able to asked the right question, but not need to. Since I didn't know anything about loans I didn't know the right questions to ask when I really needed to.
I believe loan company try to help and more specifically their employees. I talked to the really nice guy named R__ recently. He did his best to help, it's just that the means the company provides to help is kind of like a Catch-22 situation. If I were able to pay you $3000 to bring my payment up-to-date you would so not be calling me right now because surely I would have been making the, what, $50 or $100 payments all along. But sometimes policy trumps people. That's not the company's fault, completely. They service upwards of 2.2 million people (I'm using the figure in the article cause I don't have the actual one right now in front of me.), so they have to protect their interests to keep operating and providing loans to the needy.
That's tough.
I just wish there was an easier way to individualize the process. Really give people who can't options and ways to payback the loan. I'm sure not everyone who borrows money is looking for a way not to pay you back. If they had the cash flow, the payment surely would be flowing the way of the lenders. At least that's the way I feel about my personal situation compared to how I must look to the Sallie Mae, (etc.), computers.
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Crushing debt: Students finding solutions to avoid or survive loans | Deseret News
From Deseret News, a hefty chunk of information about student. It amounts to get as much information as you can throughout the process. "Knowledge is power," is basically the key to stopping further problems with indebtedness due to student loans and is almost a carry-all when it comes to most problems faced. The more you know the more information you have to deal with what comes next.
From Deseret News, a hefty chunk of information about student. It amounts to get as much information as you can throughout the process. "Knowledge is power," is basically the key to stopping further problems with indebtedness due to student loans and is almost a carry-all when it comes to most problems faced. The more you know the more information you have to deal with what comes next.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Student Loan Debt Slavery, Is College Worth It? :: The Market Oracle :: Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting Free Website
It's a little bit too ranty for me, but I agree (and experienced) some of the points being made in the article.
Edit/add:
Also Part 2 and 3 of the NYTimes blog student loan Q&A.
Answers to Your Questions About Student Loans, Part 2 - NYTimes.com
Answers to Your Questions About Student Loans, Part 3 - NYTimes.com
It's a little bit too ranty for me, but I agree (and experienced) some of the points being made in the article.
Edit/add:
Also Part 2 and 3 of the NYTimes blog student loan Q&A.
Answers to Your Questions About Student Loans, Part 2 - NYTimes.com
Answers to Your Questions About Student Loans, Part 3 - NYTimes.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)