Total student debt
The amount of student debt outstanding is quickly approaching $1.1 trillion:
Most of the student debt is now being owned and guaranteed by the Federal government. At this point, most realize that a bulk of this student debt is never going to be paid (similar to our national debt). Why would you continue lending if you knew a large portion of the principal wasn’t going to be paid? The markets understand this and that is why the government owns most of the newly minted student debt:
The amount of student debt directly held by the government has jumped by a factor of six only since 2009 from roughly $100 billion to $600 billion. Keep in mind the government backs hundreds of billions more in student debt but this amount is directly held and will be a responsibility to the government.
The young and in debt
What is even more troubling is the amount of the $1.1 trillion in debt held by the young:
Those under 30:
Those 30 to 39:
Those over 60:
Roughly 65 percent of all student debt is held by those 39 and younger. The amount of student debt held by those 60 and older is nearly invisible and keep in mind many went to school when prices were reasonable. So Congressmen that are 60 and older lecturing young Americans on buckling up and paying $20,000 or $30,000 a year by working part-time jobs to go to school are disconnected from the real economy. The average per capita wage in the US is $25,000! So even someone working full-time with a high school degree may not even cover the basic amount to attend school.
Inflation has had a massive impact on college tuition:
So while wages have gone stagnant since 1995, the cost of going to college has increased many times over. The option for many Americans is to get into debt. Young Americans have the option to struggle in an economy with no jobs for the uneducated or go to college, get into debt, and have a fighting chance at a middle class life. So it isn’t hard to understand why student debt continues to rise. What is hard to understand is why the costs continue to soar while wages have gone stagnant. What is increasing the cost so quickly? The big reason is the amount the government is willing to back and spend. Certainly we can eliminate the subsidy to paper mill for-profits for example that have no track record of success.
The young largely carry the burden of $1.1 trillion in student debt outstanding. With poor job prospects does anyone realistically think that $1.1 trillion is going to be paid back in this lifetime? This is why many young Americans end up broke, educated, and massively in debt.
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