Well, yes, I’m aware… the creation comes from the promise to pay. But the default gets tacked onto the taxpayers, so yes essentially the taxpayer is funding the money creation.Loans are money creation from nothing, they don't come from taxpayers.
Well, yes, I’m aware… the creation comes from the promise to pay. But the default gets tacked onto the taxpayers, so yes essentially the taxpayer is funding the money creation.Loans are money creation from nothing, they don't come from taxpayers.
Maybe the universities should guarantee the loans instead of US taxpayers. Universities can guarantee the loans with their endowments.Universities should be co-signers on all student loans.
I'd bet that would change their acceptance criteria and course offerings.
They should at least have to tell students what they can expect to earn after getting one of their degrees, what the per month loan payments will be and how long repayment will take... And give an update every year.Maybe the universities should guarantee the loans instead of US taxpayers. Universities can guarantee the loans with their endowments.
That is only one type of loan. There is subsidized, unsubsidized, Plus loans (for parents). If your parents are deadbeats you can get independent student loans, etc.
My daughter entered her masters a year ago. We always fill out Fafsa because you have to in order to get scholarships. Because she has a undergrad she is no longer considered my dependent. They automatically offered her like $17K for the semester. Obviously she did not accept it. Bank of dad is still open.
Bank of DadThat is only one type of loan. There is subsidized, unsubsidized, Plus loans (for parents). If your parents are deadbeats you can get independent student loans, etc.
My daughter entered her masters a year ago. We always fill out Fafsa because you have to in order to get scholarships. Because she has a undergrad she is no longer considered my dependent. They automatically offered her like $17K for the semester. Obviously she did not accept it. Bank of dad is still open.
Boston College undergrad and Tufts dental.$33,000 per year, was this for medical school ?
I'm not disagreeing with you @ripcord, but the ability to make those calculations/estimates should be taught in high school.They should at least have to tell students what they can expect to earn after getting one of their degrees, what the per month loan payments will be and how long repayment will take... And give an update every year.
That would assume people can do arithmetic, and think/plan beyond today.They should at least have to tell students what they can expect to earn after getting one of their degrees, what the per month loan payments will be and how long repayment will take... And give an update every year.
We attend Stanford, Berkeley and local JCs lectures for free. Life is for learning.That's so crazy, I've never heard of it priced so low in my life at $31/credit hour. At that price, there's no reason to not take some classes every now and then to stay fresh or learn new random subjects.
So its better just to make the banks richer? You're gonna pay it anyway through higher interest when the loans are not paid. You already pay for K-12. Would you rather have a dumbed-down society that has no higher education and the resulting social issues that come with that, or spend a bit more on the future of the country?No way in h*** should the federal government be loaning TAXPAYER dollars. That means in order to fund student loans, they would have to increase taxes. Your proposal is essentially identical to the giveaway plan of the last admin!
No, they don't. They come from the banks. It's just loan rules under federal control. This is why you cannot file student loans under bankruptcy. The feds get nothing, the banks profit. Why do you think the schools charge so much now? They can because they know the feds don't control the cost. The schools get their money, and if the student defaults, the banks lose out first. They then write off the loss and the taxpayer gets to pay the interest lost as well.The loans come from the federal government. That is exactly the problem.
If you follow finance, the old saying is the bond guys (credit) are always the smartest guys in the room.
The government guys are the smartest guys in the room said no one - ever.
You do realize that, literally, making hundreds of millions of dollars available out of thin air in order to overpay professors is the very reason that those colleges have gotten so insanely unaffordable? If there was not money hanging off of every idiot who applied to the school, they would actually have to be critical of what programs they provided and which/how many professors they hired, in order to keep the university above water.So its better just to make the banks richer? You're gonna pay it anyway through higher interest when the loans are not paid. You already pay for K-12. Would you rather have a dumbed-down society that has no higher education and the resulting social issues that come with that, or spend a bit more on the future of the country?
Yep. I worked alot of overtime and knocked out the last of my student loans in March of this year. Part of the problem is that people are getting student loans for degrees that could take an exorbitant amount of time to pay back.Record Surge in Past-Due Student Loans Adds to US Debt Burden
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/record-surge-past-due-student-150000573.html
These people need to repay all their student loans and debt.
You borrow money….. you pay it back.
Go back and read my first reply about capping the cost.You do realize that, literally, making hundreds of millions of dollars available out of thin air in order to overpay professors is the very reason that those colleges have gotten so insanely unaffordable? If there was not money hanging off of every idiot who applied to the school, they would actually have to be critical of what programs they provided and which/how many professors they hired, in order to keep the university above water.
Not every kid needs to go to college. Not every $100k degree is ever going to provide a career that justifies the cost of that education.
So, to go back to the Purdue model, not only have they frozen tuition, but there is also no “loan” for the tuition. Depending on your major, there is a set % of your earnings that must be paid back to the school. STEM degrees have lower % and length requirements than liberal arts, because those degrees will actually benefit society.
Not only does that keep kids off of an interest nightmare, it encourages Purdue to throw every possible resource into getting their grads great-paying jobs… because it will increase the funds coming back to the school, but still only be a fixed % of gross income. There really is NO valid defense of the student loan system, unless you’re cheerleading for destroying young lives under a mountain of debt.
There’s plenty of ways around traditional student loans, if the school is actually interested in helping students, rather than just their faculty & old-money alumni boosters.
She is taking her masters in Comp Sci. She just trained her first AI model last semester. I hope the AI don't learn how to train themselves, or I spent a lot of money for nothing.What’s her major ?