SparrowHawk
Veteran
- Nov 30, 2009
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Now that we have a poor debt deal done and the Republican Party being poised to win the White House, we have a potential new threat to our economy. Thanks to easy credit for students, high college tuition, and poor job prospects for graduates, the higher education industry could become America’s next bubble, according to a report in Reason magazine.
The delinquency and default rates on nearly $1 trillion worth of private and federally subsidized loans are growing, the report discloses.
In August of last year, data showed student loan debt for the first time had surpassed credit card debt. And a month later, the Department of Education said default rates for student loans had risen from 4.6 percent in 2005 to 7 percent in 2008, the most recent year for which data is available.
“While the two announcements went largely unnoticed, some took the data points as evidence that America’s next big bubble — higher education — was becoming dangerously inflated,” writes Mike Riggs in Reason.
He cites several reasons why the student loan program is in trouble:
• Unlike home and auto loans, which are approved only under conditions that have tightened drastically since 2008, student loans are “for everybody.”
• Borrowing for higher education is not based on income or salary expectations, but on the belief that a degree will pay for itself.
• College graduates from even the best programs and schools are having difficulty finding employment in the fields they studied.
• Tuition has doubled since 2000.
The ratings agency Moody’s projects that the delinquency and default rates will get worse in the next few years even if the economy recovers.
Moody’s diagnosis: “Unless students limit their debt burdens, choose fields of study that are in demand, and successfully complete their degrees on time, they will find themselves in worse financial positions and unable to earn the projected income that justified taking out their loans in the first place.”
This is yet another example of how a well intentioned Federal Government has saddled itself and us with obligations that may not be able to meet under current budgetary and economic conditions. Ross Perot warned us about the Federal Government unfunded guarantees. To date we haven't listened. We have reached the end of the road when it comes to incurring more debt. If the student loan bubble bursts we have no borrowing power to mitigate the blow to our economy. The Student Loan program started under Eisenhower and was tweaked or expanded by virtually every POTUS since, including Mr Obama. No, you can't lay this one at Obama's feet as even he tried to reign it in a bit. No, this is a true bipartisan effort. A shining example of how Government Interference usually ends with we the people footing the bill.
The delinquency and default rates on nearly $1 trillion worth of private and federally subsidized loans are growing, the report discloses.
In August of last year, data showed student loan debt for the first time had surpassed credit card debt. And a month later, the Department of Education said default rates for student loans had risen from 4.6 percent in 2005 to 7 percent in 2008, the most recent year for which data is available.
“While the two announcements went largely unnoticed, some took the data points as evidence that America’s next big bubble — higher education — was becoming dangerously inflated,” writes Mike Riggs in Reason.
He cites several reasons why the student loan program is in trouble:
• Unlike home and auto loans, which are approved only under conditions that have tightened drastically since 2008, student loans are “for everybody.”
• Borrowing for higher education is not based on income or salary expectations, but on the belief that a degree will pay for itself.
• College graduates from even the best programs and schools are having difficulty finding employment in the fields they studied.
• Tuition has doubled since 2000.
The ratings agency Moody’s projects that the delinquency and default rates will get worse in the next few years even if the economy recovers.
Moody’s diagnosis: “Unless students limit their debt burdens, choose fields of study that are in demand, and successfully complete their degrees on time, they will find themselves in worse financial positions and unable to earn the projected income that justified taking out their loans in the first place.”
This is yet another example of how a well intentioned Federal Government has saddled itself and us with obligations that may not be able to meet under current budgetary and economic conditions. Ross Perot warned us about the Federal Government unfunded guarantees. To date we haven't listened. We have reached the end of the road when it comes to incurring more debt. If the student loan bubble bursts we have no borrowing power to mitigate the blow to our economy. The Student Loan program started under Eisenhower and was tweaked or expanded by virtually every POTUS since, including Mr Obama. No, you can't lay this one at Obama's feet as even he tried to reign it in a bit. No, this is a true bipartisan effort. A shining example of how Government Interference usually ends with we the people footing the bill.