Monday, June 11, 2012

Ignore the Debt Hype


Sarah Turner and I have an article today on student loan debt on CNN.com. Based on the comments, it appears we have found an audience that needs educating. Juicy bits:
"The central bankers own the media, who in turn convince our students to borrow money from the banks (central bankers) to go to college."
"Ignore the debt hype. College is a great investment,,, Hahahahahhahahhahahahaha. The jobs today are paying 8.00 hour and they want you to have a masters degree and 2 years of brain sugery experience just to flip hamburgers. This post is posting this comment because they're getting kickbacks for the idiots that signs up to pay 50,000 dollars for a BA degree. After graduation you'll be in dept for the rest of your life, they will take any taxes you have coming and any wages you make until it's paid off. COLLEGE IS THE WORST THING YOU CAN DO IN THIS ECONOMY."




Friday, June 8, 2012

Making Student Loan Payments Sting Less



The Obama administration has made it easier for those repaying their student loans to shift into the income-based payment plan. This plan limits payments to a fixed percentage of a borrower's discretionary income (currently 15%, dropping to 10% in 2014). Any remaining debt is forgiven after 25 years.

Income-based payment a good choice for recent graduates who are getting settled into the labor market. In fact, I think it should be the default option, rather than the 10-year payment plan that is currently the standard. The current default makes little sense from an economic perspective - earnings are lowest and most uncertain when a graduate first enters the labor market, so why shove all the loan payments into those years? A college education pays off over a lifetime, so it makes economic sense to pay for that asset over a long horizon.

How different is the income-based repayment from the standard plan? For a graduate coming out of college with $22K in subsidized Stafford loan debt, and earning $30,000 a year, the standard ten-year repayment would be $217 at an interest rate of 3.4% (the current rate) or $253 (if the rate goes up to 6.8% in July, as scheduled). With the income-based plan, the payment would be only $165, no matter what happens to the interest rate. The borrower is free to pay more per month should she find some extra money lying around and wants to knock the debt back more quickly.