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Thanks to Their Student Loans, Millennials Expect to Die in Debt:

By Chloe Anagnos

"Adulting, the now common idiom goes, is hard. And to many millennials, the grim realization that debt will always be part of their lives is not making it any easier.

In some cases, their debt load is so soul-crushing they expect to die without ever paying what they owe back. So how much does this problem have to do with the higher-education crisis the country is facing? As it turns out, everything.

According to a study by Northwestern Mutual, educational loans are the leading source of debt for millennials ages 18 to 24. And according to a CreditCards.com report, over 60 percent of millennials aged 18 to 37 are completely unsure when, or if, they will be able to pay their debt off. Among those who responded they are uncertain about their ability to pay off debt, 20 percent said they expected to die in debt.

But to those with only credit card debt, the prospects aren’t as grim, as 79 percent of millennials said they had a plan to pay it all off, expecting to be completely debt-free by age 43.

While many of the news outlets reporting on these findings urge young people to get a plan in place so they can pay off their debt, the reality is that government’s push to give everyone a college education is what has greatly contributed to young people’s debt load. And what’s worse, degrees are not actually helping many young people get a job.

Will bureaucrats and those who pushed for more government-subsidized education ever admit they created a monster that has finally gotten out of control?

Government’s Role in Millennials’ Bad Choices
When government and elected officials push college education as a right, they imply that the government has the duty to help provide it to the populace. With grants, subsidies, and easy, risk-free loans going out to 17-year-olds with no credit history, young people think pursuing the career of their dreams is a piece of cake. But once school is out and all they have is a diploma, they finally realize things weren’t as easy as they expected.

The problem is that when government enters the picture and makes it easier for consumers to pay for college, it artificially increases the demand for college. With a greater number of students demanding higher education, schools have to raise their prices. After all, they have a limited supply of what they offer.

As explained by economist Ryan McMaken, “Were it not for the subsidized loans and — in the case of public colleges — directly subsidized tuition, the number of students able to afford such degrees would shrink considerably.” With fewer students knocking on their doors, colleges would have to slash costs and, consequently, prices, just so they could fill up their empty classrooms. But to bureaucrats, the solution doesn’t lie with letting the market work. Instead, they want more government interference.

Pushing for better loan deals, more regulation, or penalties for students who can’t pay the loans back, bureaucrats and their supporters are only worsening the problem they created.

In an age in which more and more employers are ditching degree requirements, paying for a piece of paper proving you finished college is becoming increasingly unnecessary. The government continues to head in the wrong direction, giving young people the idea that college is for everyone. If this doesn’t prove the government doesn’t have our best interests at heart, nothing else does."

URL: [activistpost.com]

of-the-mountain 9 Jan 14
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8 comments

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1

Secret is to get a degree in an employable field and to not get more than the minimum education required for an entry-level position.

2

Let me tell you this: my student loans can sit for as long as I can put them off...my taxes too.
Fuck this government...I am DONE.

1

People in debt do not buy houses,cars or have children if they are sane.

1

Another addition to the debt, is that a good portion in this day and age a degree doesn't have a guarantee that you will find a job, and many times not in that field, so they take a much lower paying job just to try and make ends meet, and never reach that.

I dealt with this myself for a while.
I had achiever 2 BA's, one in Database/Networking, and Hardware engineering.
then an associates in web development.
which one would thing would be enough to get at least an entry level somewhere.
But at the time the job market was so bad that people were only hiring only younger people with a Masters, and or better for those jobs, I was 45 at the time.

I did eventually find work, actually a great job that I loved.
But in a long time I barely scratched the surface of what I owed. Intrest never stops.

1

Student debt is just the latest incarnation of "indentured servitude".

1

Maybe the educational system needs "Mike Rowe Management"!

1

It's not just millennials.

@LimitedLight I have no idea what PSLF is.

@LimitedLight I hope it works out the way you're expecting. I've read a number of stories about how the Dept. of Education has been reneging on
several of their loan forgiveness/repayment programs. I'm permanently disabled and can't get them to forgive my loan, the way they're supposed to.
Good luck.

@LimitedLight It's been my experience that they have a bad habit of changing the rules. Quite arbitrarily, too.

2

And the recently sainted Bush stopped bankruptcy from removing student loan debt. But not business debters who keep all their personal assets even after 6 bankruptcies (who could that be)

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