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#1 $1tn student debt crisis crushes home-buying dream

Posted: Thu Apr 17, 2014 11:22 pm
by frigidmagi
BBC
Student debt has risen dramatically in recent years, leaving many college graduates unable to buy their first homes. That has analysts worried about the future of the US economy.

There are plenty of "For Sale" signs in the Philadelphia suburb where Michael Nealis lives with his wife, Jessica. They dream of owning a home and on learning they were expecting their first child, they approached a mortgage adviser.

"We were told immediately that no mortgage company would touch me with the amount of student loan debt that I have," Mr Nealis says.

He studied for an undergraduate degree for four years and owes $64,000 (£38,138) in student loans. He is now a science teacher and Jessica works as a special needs assistant in a school.

'Beyond frustrating'
But with stricter rules for mortgage lenders now in place following the sub-prime debt crisis, their debt-to-income ratio disqualifies them from a loan.

Student debt repayments account for around 45% of Mr Nealis' monthly take-home pay, making it impossible, he says, to save for a deposit.

"It's beyond frustrating," he says. "We're left in a situation where we can't qualify for anything. I make a decent living but I don't make enough to pay $1,200 a month in student loans."

Housing market experts say that many young people are in the same situation, which is dampening demand for homes. First-time buyers have historically been the bedrock of the US housing market, accounting for around 40% of total sales.

The latest figures from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) show that in February 2014 they only accounted for 28%.

NAR President Steve Brown said that in a recent consumer survey, 56% of younger buyers who took longer to save for a down payment identified student debt as the biggest obstacle.

"It's clear there are other people who would like to buy a home that are not in the market because of debt issues, so we can expect a lingering impact of delayed home buying," he said.

Levels of student debt have risen substantially in recent years. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, aggregate student loans nationwide have almost quadrupled in the past ten years, from $253bn at the end of 2003 to $1.08tn at the end of 2013.

It is now the second-highest form of consumer debt after mortgages, overtaking credit card borrowing and car loans. One of the main reasons is that the price of higher education is rising.

Between 2000-12 the average cost of four-year college tuition increased 44%. The rise was highest at public universities, which have traditionally provided a cheaper alternative to for-profit and private institutions.

Call for forgiveness
The income level of the average family has not kept pace, and so students are taking out more loans. The CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association, David Stevens, is worried by the trend.

"If the average college graduate has more student debt than we have ever seen the likes of before in this country, that has an extraordinarily dampening effect on their ability to buy a home," he says.

"With housing making up a fifth of the gross domestic product of this country, that could have an adverse impact on the pace of the economic recovery."

He says that policymakers are starting to take note that student debt may be starting to drag down the economy.

"Some are calling for some form of debt forgiveness programme," he says. "Some are discussing providing subsidies for young people to buy their first homes."

Worth it?
There are also proposals in Congress to reset student loan interest rates and make debt refinancing easier, amid concerns that increasing numbers of graduates are unable to repay their loans back in time.

In 2003, 6.2% of borrowers were at least 90 days late making a payment. By 2013 that number had risen to 11.5%.

Research shows that having a university education does pay off in the long term; graduates have lower rates of unemployment and higher salaries. But Aaron Smith, who founded Young Invincibles to represent the interests of 18-34-year-olds, says people he speaks to are increasingly worried about the cost.

"There's a lot of scepticism out there among young people about whether it's worth going to college anymore," he says. "They see their older brothers and sisters in huge amounts of debt and question whether they want to be in that position."

He said that this could hinder social mobility in the US.

"One of the ways people from different spheres of our economic system moved up was by getting an education then being able to buy a house, which opened up a path to the middle class for millions of Americans," he says. "That is becoming more of a distant reality for a lot of young people."

Homeownership certainly seems a very distant dream for Mr Nealis.

"I thought I did everything right," he says. "I had a blue-collar father, a work-from-home mother and I was trying to do better. But it seems that having got an education, I'm now in a situation worse than they were."
We've reached the point where student debt has not just become a mill-stone around the neck of the individual student, but is becoming a major drag on our economy. Each dollar put into repaying the debt is money not being spent on comsumer goods or property, the kind of spending that actually drives our economy.

So... What do we do about it? There after all must be some kind of solution.

First off, let us consider where the solution must come from. Can the state governments do anything? I would argue that a lack of resources and a lack of interest means no. Although I will point out that New Mexico has set up a fund for anyone who wants to go to community college for 2 years, they get a free ride. Which I think is a good deal. However not every state can or wants to do that. A patchwork system is gonna to cause as many problems as it fits, so I'm rather against it. The private sector isn't interested and there are still companies benefiting from the current set up who will fight it tooth and nail. To be honest this really isn't the private sectors bag, most of the private sector exists to turn a profit. That really only leaves the federal government.

So what should the federal government do? I think we all agree that giving everyone a free college education isn't practical, or for that matter necessary. On the other hand some sort of GI Bill like program for civilians may be the answer. So we need to estblish some sort of measuring stick of who gets to go to college. We'll need to set up standards over who gets to stay. These will be tricky business, there will be issues of priviledge, race, religion and a million other things. It may be best to require everyone to take 2 years of community college before they can enter university.

Are there other solutions, or improves anyone would like to suggest?

#2 Re: $1tn student debt crisis crushes home-buying dream

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2014 1:03 am
by Lys
Venezuela's political and economic situation makes it seem like a poor place to look to for answers. To be blunt it's a goddamned shithole drowning in a cesspit of systemic malaise, gross corruption, and criminal incompetence. However I believe that the country's higher education system is a genuinely good thing that is worthy of emulation. Basically, way back in the day Venezuela found itself with considerable oil resources, and no native means for exploiting them, forcing the country to rely on foreign equipment and expertise. The powers that be decided to correct this by instituting public universities that could be attended free of charge, in order to create the local expertise required to run the oil industry without expensive foreign help. It was an investment in the future, and to my mind it paid out handsomely.

I expect the Chavistas have completely ruined the system by now, along with everything else they touch, but at the least it used to turn out a cadre of well educated, competent professionals. It's much the reason why, for example, Procter & Gamble put its Latin America headquarters in Caracas. It's also the reason why wealthy Venezuelans largely didn't feel the need to go overseas for treatment, as the local medical profession is good enough (with the exception of the most severe cancers). In fact, my mother preferred Venezuelan doctors even after we moved to the States. Our engineers in general were pretty good too, and not just the ones running the oil rigs and the refineries. Did you know that over 70% of Venezuela's power generation is hyderoelectric? It makes sense when you think about it, there's more oil money if you're not burning the stuff to keep the lights on.

Now the universities aren't a thing where you can just show up and get an education like it is with public schools, you do have to get admitted. That involves having had good grades in your secondary education, as well as passing placement exams and the like. I do believe there are private universities for those who can afford them and don't qualify for the public ones. The system wasn't perfect, for example it was hard as hell for the average person to get a degree in telecommunications or journalism, because both had become the goto career option for the untalented but well connected. Sort of like the Venezuelan equivalent of the US business degree. There was also relatively less demand placed on it than there is on American colleges due to the sheer level crushing poverty among the general population. There's actually scholarships to cover living expenses, because a lot of students who do make the cut to attend wouldn't be able to afford to otherwise, even with zero tuition.

What I'm trying to get at here is that I think there is room for merit based free higher education to be given to the populace. To a certain extent that already exists, there are Pell Grants and Stafford Loans and scholarships, but I think it would be good to implement it on a more unified and systematic scale. As it is now it's a hodgepodge of different things and it takes quite a bit of effort to figure it all out. It's expensive, sure, but it's an investment in the future as well. A modern society requires highly trained and educated experts in various fields, and it requires them in such numbers that we cannot rely on the wealthy elite to pay for them. It's not that everyone should get a free college education, that's a bit ridiculous, but rather that everyone should have the opportunity to get a free college education. Whether they do get it or not should depend on personal merit.

#3 Re: $1tn student debt crisis crushes home-buying dream

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2014 9:17 am
by Norseman
I have a pile of old Norwegian ads from 1890s offering tons of different private schools for children at all levels up to what we'd call high-school in the USA. They are quite fascinating some praising their prices, others the number of teachers, and mentioning subjects taught and so forth.

Likewise university used to be a highly elite establishment where you not only had to pay your way, but had little in the way of subsidized loans. It was there to educate the children of the elite.

I could make some translations of satires the right-wing did about free school education etc, etc, in fact I did some research into just that a few months ago. A lot of that stuff would be very familiar to people in the USA today, except, you know, actually funny (US Right Wing seems strangely lacking in comedic talent.) Note that this right wing was just as ingrained in society as it was in any other country of the period.

Despite this everything changed. But I'm always amazed at how much Norway changed politically and culturally.

And my point is that no matter how insurmountable the obstacles may seem and how strong the opposition, and how grounded that opposition is in the electoral base, things can *still* change radically.