Is student loan forgiveness the answer?

Many sectors of the economy, from banking to insurance to manufacturing, have all received extremely sizable public assistance in order to repair their damaged businesses. To be clear, these “bailouts” are actually offsetting the losses from disastrous decision-making or failed business models. If the economy were not being affected en masse, these same businesses would probably be allowed to fail, because every indication is that they have failed.

What, then, about those who used debt to create real value? What about the companies that leveraged their debt and invested wisely? What about the individuals who used debt to pay for education? This line of reasoning is loaded, because it takes as a presupposition that “Education is Valuable.” With the caveat that some people might argue over the true value of education, Student Loan Bubble will take it as a given that college usually does increase an individual’s capacity to be a productive member of society.

At what point did we collectively decide that our public funds would be used to reward failed businesses? When did we decide we would use public money to send people to school, only to leave them with crippling debt repayments? As Student Loan Bubble has previously speculated, it is entirely possible that the public financing of education has driven tuition prices up at a rate much faster than inflation.

As a nation, are we entirely satisfied to punish the most productive members of our society with debt that is impossible to discharge, when it was probably a public policy error that inflated tuition prices in the first place?

Certainly, this line of reasoning is not without consequence. This is the perfect storm that would trigger the Student Loan Bubble, which would create a new “dark ages” for US colleges and universities who rely on inflated tuition, and would bankrupt even more lending companies. Those securities that are backed by student loan debt would suddenly become “toxic assets” in exactly the same manner as housing mortgages. Government purchase of those newly-toxic assets would, in fact, be a bailout for the student lending industry.

At this point, Student Loan Bubble is not willing to articulate a formal position on the topic, but there are extremely compelling arguments to be made for both sides of the issue. Consider the following article from banks.com…

Excerpt from: http://www.banks.com/blogs/mortgages/2009/03/13/wo…

In a way, it makes sense. How many of us graduated from school with student loan debt? What would we be able to buy if we didn’t have it? How much more would we be able to borrow if we weren’t making student loan payments? The stated goals of our leaders, since the issue of financial crisis reared its head, have all been connected with getting us to spend more money. So why not make it possible?

Student loan forgiveness would be costly, though. The government would have to buy all the loans from the folks it subsidizes to offer low cost student loans, and then forgive the loans. It could work, though, as part of the effort to cut out the “middle man” when it comes to student loans. If the government began making the loans directly to students, rather than paying others to do so, the government could make money on it. And it might go toward reducing the horrendous deficit we’re in.

Credit cards are a fatally attractive gimmick for managing student loan debt

The student loan bubble is a unique debt situation that spans multiple generations, with the younger doing its best to remain independent, and the older finding itself impotent to help even if it wanted. This requires students to reexamine their consumption patterns, which may have included using a credit card for discretionary items. While this can be seen as a good sign, more troubling is the notion of using short-term debt, including credit cards, in a futile effort to pay for the longer term.

The practice of leveraging credit cards against student debt is a recipe for disaster, because it isn’t the interest rate of credit cards that makes this behavior attractive, it is the debt repayment terms that make the more expensive option attractive. Students are unable to default on their educational loan debt, but they may have more options for dealing with poorly managed credit card debt.

Excerpt from: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122756709839854439…

Recent graduates traditionally live on a shoestring, but they were often protected by a financial safety net: their parents. Now, as 401(k) balances erode and home values plunge, many families are coping with other financial problems and are less able to help the children.

Mandy Kakavas graduated in 2007 with $25,000 in student loans and $3,000 in credit card debt. Her mother raided her 401(k) to help her daughter pay for a degree in mass communications from the University of California, Berkeley, and can no longer help her financially.

“I look at the headlines about the bad economy, and I feel like I’ve already been there for a while,” she says.

Although Ms. Kakavas has cut corners on dining out and taken a second job to earn extra cash, she says she often uses her credit cards to pay her student-loan bills. In January, a new batch of student loans that were deferred will land.

“It’s going to catch up to me,” she says. “It’s hard to see financially where you’re going to be 20 years from now when you don’t know how you’re going to make payments next month.”

Some are taking out loans to cover the loans. Lindsay Fletcher of Wilmington, N.C., has $50,000 in student loans. To make ends meet for the next couple of months, she has taken out a $2,500 personal loan at a 13.9% interest rate to help pay off her credit cards and student loans, which come out of forbearance — deferment due to financial hardship — in November.

“There’s been a lot of tearful calls to Mom,” Ms. Fletcher says. “And I know that if she could help me, she would. But I don’t want her to have to. That’s why I went to college.” Unlike mortgages and credit cards, student loans are not forgiven in bankruptcy proceedings.