From "Nope, just debt" (The Economist, October 29):
Two things, however, are clear. The size of student debt is vast (see chart), and lots of borrowers are struggling. More than 10m students took out loans for the latest academic year, according to a report issued on October 26th by the College Board, a consortium of academic institutions. Almost a third of students graduating from college, and 69% of the ones dropping out, hold debt tied to their education.Related entries
The total amount of debt is staggering. The New York Federal Reserve Bank puts it at $550 billion, but includes a footnote in the “technical notes” section suggesting this may be an underestimate. Sallie Mae, the school-loan equivalent of the housing industry’s Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, reckons there are $757 billion-worth of outstanding loans. A bank heavily involved in the area says there is at least another $111 billion in purely private loans, and with new lending estimated in excess of $112 billion for this year alone, the total amount outstanding will surpass $1 trillion in the not-so-distant future.
■ I've been singing this song for eight years.
■ "This ugly partnership of deceit"
■ “Some of them could have bought a house for what they spent on their education.”
■ “‘You are in deep doo-doo, little girl.’”
■ Community college
■ Paying for college, revisited
■ Paying for college: A rant of modest proportions
■ About college





1 comments:
I'm very proud of our girl Emma. Graduated from college with no loans whatsoever. If she had debt, she would not be able to minister to the poor in the city. She would be working to pay off college loans. Her college has supporters that pay the tuition and the students are responsible for Room and Board ETC. (this comes to about $10,000)
Thank you for your wise advice over the years. I'm sure it formed my no college loan philosophy, along with a few other personal experiences.
Emma feels very free.
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