Mounting Student Loans a 'Debt Bomb" Waiting to Explode

<p>There’s an excellent article on msnbc.com today about the student loan debt crisis. [Bottom</a> Line - Mounting student loans a ‘debt bomb’ waiting to explode](<a href=“http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/22/10469504-mounting-student-loans-a-debt-bomb-waiting-to-explode]Bottom”>http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/22/10469504-mounting-student-loans-a-debt-bomb-waiting-to-explode)</p>

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<p>Advertise | AdChoicesCollege seniors who graduated with student loans in 2010 owed an average of $25,250, up five percent from the previous year. Parents had an average of $34,000 in student loans for their children. The report says the number of these parental loans has jumped 75 percent since 2005-2006. </p>

<p>“These are enormous numbers,” says Ike Shulman, a bankruptcy attorney in San Jose, Calif. “They’re basically setting us up for ** having a large number of fellow citizens become economically non-functional for the rest of their adult lives.” **</p>

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<p>I completely agree with Mr. Shulman. And, the debt load that he seems to be remarking about isn’t even that huge…we know of many borrowing greater numbers. </p>

<p>I once commented that kids taking out huge loans (and I was talking about those with 80k+ student loan debt) were ruining their future adult lives and I got flamed for saying that. these kinds of debt stagnates a person’s ability to move forward with their life…buy a home, save money, start a family, have some security.</p>

<p>Agree with Shulman, but the story really should be about taking on too much debt without figuring out first how & when to pay it back. Certainly, the non-dischargability status makes it almost worse than a foreclosure right now.</p>

<p>I really, really think that as more of these stories are coming out (we on CC have been chronicling this for at least a year now) in the mainstream media, parents entering the college selection scene may become somewhat more savvy over time & will choose schools of value over schools of prestige for their kids.</p>

<p>JNM, I think non-dischargeability makes it absolutely worse, not almost worse, than a foreclosure in many places. With a foreclosure, you can hand the keys to the bank (declare bankruptcy may be needed in some places, not all), and then get on with your life. Go rent a place. Whatever. But with student debt, you will be paying them for the rest of your life.</p>

<p>It seems like consumer ignorance is the problem here. It’s a simple return on investment calculation.</p>

<p>Note: I’m not cracking on the following degree, I am just making a point.</p>

<p>If you want a degree in Music Therapy, you should know how much the bottom quarter and the top quarter makes in that field. If the bottom quarter makes $25k and the top quarter makes $50k, don’t you think it would be unreasonable to spend $50k on the education? Yes! Now if the starting salary of a Music Therapist was $100k, that’s an entire different story. But it’s not.</p>

<p>So instead of having the government forgive your miscalculation on your degree and its ROI, let those people suffer.</p>