http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/studentloandebtbubble.htm
‘Who
ever imagined that Ben Bernanke would become a poster child for the student
loan debt problem in
The Federal Reserve Bank of
The
Either way, we are talking about an
extraordinary amount of money.
Sadly, approximately two-thirds
of all
That might not be so bad if the
economy was full of good paying jobs for college graduates, but that simply is
not the case.
As college tuition continues to soar,
the student loan debt problem continues to get even worse.
That is not a good trend.
The truth is that it has simply
gotten way too expensive to go to college.
Back in 1952, a full year of tuition
at Harvard was only $600.
Today, the price tag is $35,568.
So why is a Harvard education 59
times more expensive than it used to be?
Somebody is getting rich off of all
this, and it isn't the students.
In fact, many students are looking at
a life of debt slavery for decades to come.
The following is a quote from one
recent graduate from a recent Politico article....
“I
pay almost $1,000 a month just in student loan repayment. I will have to do so
for the next 30 years. How will I ever afford to buy a house, have children or
save for the future?”
After working so hard all the way
through school, is that any kind of a "future" to look forward to?
The system is failing our young
people.
Many young college graduates have
found themselves unable to make their payments or have simply decided to quit
making payments.
Officially, the student loan default
rate has nearly doubled since
2005. But a new report from the Federal Reserve Bank of
But it isn't just young people
getting into trouble with student loan debt.
These days, financial institutions
are increasingly targeting parents. Federal student loans often do not
cover all of the expenses of college in this day and age, and so increasingly
loans are being made to parents to make up the difference. Student loans
made to directly to parents have increased by 75 percent since the 2005-2006
academic year.
Unfortunately, what students and
parents are getting in return for all of this money is not that great.
I spent eight years of my life
studying at
Almost everyone agrees that the
quality of college education in
When I was in school, I could hardly
believe how little was being required of me. But being as lazy as I was,
I certainly did not complain.
If only more parents realized what
was really going on.
The following are some facts about
the quality of college education in the
-"After two years in college,
45% of students showed no significant gains in learning; after four years, 36%
showed little change."
-"Students also spent 50% less
time studying compared with students a few decades ago"
-"35% of students report
spending five or fewer hours per week studying alone."
-"50% said they never took a
class in a typical semester where they wrote more than 20 pages"
-"32% never took a course in a typical
semester where they read more than 40 pages per week."
Are you starting to get the picture?
If you are in college right now,
enjoy the good times while they last, because when you graduate you will find
that there are very few good jobs available for the hordes of new college
graduates that are pouring into the labor market.
For a new college graduate, things
can be rather depressing. Just consider the following statistics....
*About a third of all college graduates end up
taking jobs that don't even require college degrees.
*In the
*In the
There are millions of college
graduates that are unemployed in
It is no coincidence that incomes for
households led by someone between the ages of 25 and 34 have fallen by about 12 percent after you
adjust for inflation since the year 2000.
Young people in
Many are unable to make it at all and
have moved back in with Mom and Dad. As I wrote about recently, approximately 25 million American adults are living
with their parents at this point.
The system of higher education in
this country is badly broken and it desperately needs to be fixed…’